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«s 



• "All the News 

hat’s Fit to Print” 



LATE CITY EDITIOI* 


Weather; Cloudy, occasional rain 
likely today through tomorrow. 
Temperature range: today 62-74; 
Friday 71-89. Detfaib on page 44. 




CXXV . . No»43£9S 


-G-Wt The New York TSbhs Cbnpur 


NEW YORK , SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1976 


23 cents bemu d sO-nllc mm tram New York City. 
raw» xonc island. Hljhrr in air feUtey ades- 


20 CENTS 





M TALKS 
lift 






■ ■ * -. * 
M» » 1m 



' 


*?.y 



Says New Medicaid 
s Remove Element 
)ubt in Bargaining 


'S MORE MIUTAN 


ders All Ambulances! 
)id Public Facilities 
ipt in Emergencies 


3y DAVID BIRD 
Tew York City officials, 
irst Deputy Mayor John 
Mtti, began intensive 
ions with union leaders 
:erday in a new attempt 
: the dispute over lay- 
t touched off a walkout 
X) nonmedical workers 
16 city’s municipal hos- 


tile strike in its third 
ket lines set up by Local 
District Council 37 of 
te, County and Munici- 
ployees were becoming 
lilitant There were in- 
’ attempts to turn away 
nces trying to bring in 
.tients to the hospitals, 
have' all remained open 



reduced services, 
result, the city’s Health 
■spitals Corporation or- 
*iat — except in extreme 
cies— all of iis ll4 am- 
now on the streets 
ients to the nonstruck 
jospitals instead of the 
:ipal institutions, 
jrvices Reduced 
struck hospitals’ have 
nonemergency serv- 
ding patients home as 
r 2 >sssihle^ and many 
#4 down the regular 
t clinics while keeping 
y rooms open. \ 
egotiaticms again un 
no ruling was madej 
: Abraham J. Gellinoff] 
Supreme Court at . a 
i a temporary restrain- 
the city, obtained to 
spike. The strike is 
ier the state’s Taylor 
;h prohibits walkouts 
workers. - 
Gellinoff continued 
inlag order, - which so 
ad no effect on die 
hi a new hearing set 
Wednesday. .. 
jotiators, meeting at 
‘ork Hilton Hotel with 
ate Senator Basil A. 

- the mediator - ap- 
f Mayor Beame, faced 
u3t hurdles “of even 
Ss. City officials said 
would be required by 
ced Medicaid reim- 
. rates Announced by 
: Thursday, 
a dinner break, Mr. 
held a brief news 


Attoetoted Press 


At Eetlehong Township,- near Johannesburg-, South African youths exult after getting fire tona commercial truck. The 
. .. ' vehicle’s cargo, fish-oil dnnns, was carried away by the deifionstrators. . 


South African Township’s 
Deaths at 4 in 3 Days, 
Including a White 


Sniping at Wounded Halts 
Evacuation at Beirut Camp 


Special to TSe New York Tunis 


By JOHN F. BURNS 

Special to Tbe Kew York Time* 

JOHANNESBURG, Aug. 6— 
Police riot squads opened fire 
in Soweto today to disperse 
crowds of youths who roamed 
the - black .township attacking 


BEIRUT. Lebanon, Aug. 6 — 
The International Committee of 
the Red Cross broke off its 
evacuation of the wounded 
from the Tell Zaatar Palestinian 
camp today after some of the 
wounded bad been shot from 
(rightist Christian positions 


the 


was shot in the face by 
sniper, the rescuers said. 

A Swiss driver for the Red 
Cross was slightly wounded by 
sniper fire. Several vehicles 
clearly marked with the red 
cross were hit 
Maj. Fuad Malek, the Chris- 


About 30 people were injured! commander in the area, ac- 


as hundreds trying to get onlknowledged that the sniper fire 
the Red Cross trucks swarmed! had ““e from Christian lines. 

’’rene- 


out of the defense perimeter He caUed snipers 
• • - • fgades” who «< 


Wk 1 NSTARHSCDT; 


Reacting to Humphrey Staff 
Report, He Insists West 
Needs a Strong Iran 


By BERNARD GWERTZMAN 
Special ti The New York Tlmea 

TEHERAN, Iran, Aug. 6— 
Shah Mohammed Riza Pahlevi 
denied today that Iran was 
having difficulties in handling 
of modern 


on Page 45, Column 1 


| the ■ black -township sacking and. tbe open field where who were ignoring a vast number 

ear^hu^iira^ werT loading tire! orders - He tried unsuccessfully) weapons from the United 

Blac*^m<iea. The camp’s wLstin^ 0 ** '*• 

workers from their jobs in defenders shot into the air rad, ° contact with another porters th<.t Washington must 
Johannesburg; ’ . ’ . land drove thl crowds Sck 1 command post continue to seU ana* to his 

. yday/pf firefftwi behind ^.‘■^seniiere. was * day] country or risk instability and 

turbances in - the township, the Christian lihes above the camp of violeace ^P' 1 ^ a cease-fire war in his area, 

official toil W.-.S four dead - was ilnct J at 2 signed by all the military coat- «» the Umted 

three’ kiHed -TVe&iesday. -one Iyil ig on stretchers on t hei manders m Lebanon that was I State, was clear : A strong 

death ih a hospital today— and ^, d ud in tte fjret supposed to have gone into e f- ] weH-a^tned Iran was in the 

‘ vt , \fec± vesterdav momine i interests of the West and he 

picking them rff one by on£l ted y^dny morning^ ^ UH | WU Mt the mood to accept 

criticism about the sale of arms 
or how they were used — major 
points in a Senate staff study 


30 wounded. To prevent rio- ll/ltlvllIB W11C U) . vuc . - - - _ J 

lence elsewhere, a national po- ^ we U-aimed single shots, aj ^ BeinJt was shelled 
lice alert was ordered. There meBjber 0 f the rescue team;^ mortars ' m afternoon as 
were reports of arson and stone ^jd. , a chartered Red Cross plane was 

throwing incidents from widely Ac least four of ^ WOU nded Siting ready to leave. Shells 

scattered . townships in. three j^t, including an already fdl 200- y ards from the plane, 

seriously injured woman who Conthmed on Page 2, Column 8 


[provinces, but no deaths. 

: White PoBceman Dies 
A white pohee officer, struck 
|by a van Wednesday as stii- . 
dents .charged a roadblock out- 1- 
side Soweto with the vehicle, 
died today. • ‘ i 

At nightfitU Bri& S. W. Ie 
Roux, the Soweto Police Com- 
missioner, said the calm that 
developed in -nfidaft«uoori ap- 
peared tb. -be -holding. ‘Anctber 


ByDAVIDA-ANDELMAN * 

Special to TSe Ne* 1 Yack Tim® 

. BANGKOK, Thailand, Aug. fijtlie Ieadersh^> hoped would be 

police spokesman said^e $kua-|---Vi^^ agreed! at least a temporary guarantee 

itTnn wins “mwre -or less under I today- to -establish diplomariC'fhftf- Vietnam would not SUD- 


dou was “more -or i^s under 
controL”. . -’- v ; ;- 

The police said that four.p-en 


Gwitinued tm Page-4, Column 4 



^or 

rtuoso of Cello Was 73 


relations, completing Vietnam’s 
diploniatic _ reconciliation with 
nofi-Communist Southeast Asia. 
-• The difficult series of nego- 
tiations between Vietnam and 
[Thailand; its closest non-Coxn- 
munist neighbor, were com- 


‘O’ERG. DAVIS 
Piatigorsky. one of the 
.real cellists, died at 
- in Xps Angeles yes- . 
the- age of 73. 
been Dl for a year and- ; 
it it tod : not stopped 
an occasional concert . 

and he - recently, ri; 
l a series of .master 
'Switzerland. — 


aed with-, the. many, 
inists. and., riolinisfe 
s captured the public’s 
on in the 20th century, 
er of superstarcellists. 
i snail. Only tftree^ 
ally qualify for. inchi- 
ils circumscribed pan- 
ablo Casals, Mstislav 
rich and Piatigorsky: . 
ree might loosely be. 
■izedas larger-than-life 
a, butJiatigorsky,.botb; 
y and in his approach' 
f making, stood tallest 
Jspect, a master of The 
airy Romantic tradi- 
jainst his 6-foot-3-inch 
he cello . almost seemed 
oy. But when he played 
rument, the sonorities 
from it were immense, 
’luscious and sensuous; 
fat .the service of a. rich- 
res sive, . individualistic 
mind. =. 

•iatigorsky -soimd •' in its 
eas described by Olin 
in The New : York] 



BottsdUM. 

Gregor Piatigorsky 


Times, after. a.^ Town Hall con- 
cert in 1339: v : /. . , . ; 

*The tore had every aanority 
and shadjngfrran organ f ufiness 
and’ virility; lyrical beauty and) 
intensity, in passages-, -of sus- 
tained song*, or. fine spon,-as 


Contimred on Page 22^ Column 2 


- this niU'FBW xtsbeb >to 

OHDBR HOara DSEJV&gY ON- THK NEW. 

| YOKE TTMSS— 8W>-32C-&C0'..-AdTj. 


Hanoi and Bangkok Agree 
T o Set Up Diplomatic T ies 


that Vietnam would not sup- 
port Thailand's Communist in- 
surgency. 

Neither side got everything 
it wanted. In the short run this 
may prove fax more da m agi n g 
| for Thailand and its delicately 
poised coalition Government 
pie ted this morning after more than for. Vietnam,, which has 
than a year of : bickerings and shown in the last year and a 
mutual ' recriminations and .: a half that It can' wait for what 
final two days df talks. jit wants. 

For Vietnam it marked whatj . powerful Thai military is 
Hanoi leaders hoped would be unhappy with the events lead- 
tile beginning of a new, closer -up- to today's accord and 
relationship with the West- t^ m itself could proye ^ bl g- 
and-particulariy wth the United to ThaOand s stabil- 

Sta JTwhich has said it would W anything Vietnam 

not piirade Vietaam with eco-!™^ 1 - tave “ k 

Lnic reconstruction aid onlesai^? a ^ 

uc insurgency here. 

The'. agreement 'contained a 


Hanoi established . am Icable re- 
lations with its neighbors. 

' For Thailand it marked what 


Costumed OB Page 3, Column 1 


that was made public over last 
weekend. 

*'Can the United States or 
the non-Cominunist world af- 
ford to lose Iran?" the Shah 
asked at a news conference 
for a dozen journalists travel- 
ing with Secretary of State 
Henry A. Kissinger. "What will 
you do if one day Iran will 
be in danger of collapsing?” 
he went on. "Do you have any 
Ichoice?” 

Peril to Americans Seen 

The staff study said that $10 
billion in arms sold in recent 
ydars was excessive, bad cot 
[been used well and required the 
hiring of too many Americans 
to operate arms systems. Those 
'Americans would be indirect 
hostages in case of war, the 
study said. 

The Shah said the number 
of Americans cited in the re- 
port as working in Iran was 
!too high but that the United 
'states really had no alterna- 
tive to its current policy. .If 
Iran became weakened - militar- 
[ily, he said, the United States 
and the West would be faced 
'with “an all-out nuclear holo- 
caust or other Vietnams on 
every now and 

them 

The news conference, held 


Senate Votes an Extension 
Of Cuts in Taxes , 49-22 


Measure Would Also Reduce Levy on 
Estates and Add Education Credit 


— i Faces Conference With House 


By EILEEN SHANAHAN 

Speeld to Tbf.New York TUaea 


WASHINGTON. August 
The Senate passed tonight tbe| 
longest and most complicated 
tax bill in two decades. Among 
its major provisions, the bill 
continues all the 1975 tax. 
cuts for both individuals and 
businesses, reduces the estate 
tax and provides a tax credit 
against a small, portion of the 
cost of higher, education. 

The vote was 49 to 22. 

The bill will now go to a 
{joint Senate-House conference 
committee, which will have to 
compromise the many differ- 
ences between the Senate bill 
and a tax bill that was passed 
by the House last year.' Thej 
conference committee is not 
expected to start work until 
after the Republican National 
Convention this month. 

Before taking final action on 
the measure, which it has been 
debating since June 16, the 
Senate rejected two provisions 
that were being urged upon it 
by the Ford Administration. 

The first was a proposal by 
Senator Robert Dole, Republi- 
can of Kansas, that the present 
personal exemption of $750 for 
each individual covered by a 
tax return be raised to $1,000. 

The White House passed the 
word to key Republicans last 
night that it wanted a vote on 
this issue, although it knew it 
could not win. Administration 


lobbyists told Republican Sena- 
tors' that the reason for the 
White House request was that 
President Ford believed that a 
rejection of the increase in the 
personal exemption would make 
a good campaign issue for him. 

Mr. Ford has, in many 
speeches and proposals, held 
out the hope to the public that 
the personal exemption could 
be increased to $!,000 if Con- 
gress would only reduce spend- 
ing by enough to balance tbe 
revenue loss. 

Last night and today, how- 
ever, Administration lobbyists 
{were not asking for any ac- 
companying spending cut and 
Senator Dole’s proposal was 
killed, 57 to 29, after only 
about 10 minutes of debate, 
after Senator Edmund S. Mus- 
kie, chairman of the Budget 
Committee, protested that the 
proposal would add $7.1 billion 
to next year's Federal deficit. 

The other issue on which 
the Administration was defeat- 
ed was a proposed reduction 
of $700 million to $900 million 
annually in the amount of ca- 
pital gains taxes that would 
have to be paid on property 
that had been owned for more 
than five years. 

The Administration has long 
urged reducing the taxes on 


CUB SHARPLY 


TO W FOR JULY 


Growth of the Labor Force 


Pushes Figure Up Despite 
Increase in Employment 


7.4 MILLION FOUND IDLE 


White House Disappointed 
but Optimistic— Union 
Leaders Are Critical 


Continued on Page 12, Column 3 


Mystery Disease Claims 
2 More, Putting T oil at 25\l 


By EDWIN L. DALE Jr. 

Sptcitl to Tbe New York Times 
WASHINGTON. Aug. 6 — 
The nation's unemployment 
rate rose substantially in July 
from 7.5 percent to 7.8 percent 
of the labor force despite a big 
increase in the number of per- 
sons with jobs, the Labor De- 
partment reported today- 
The reason for this seeming 
contraditjon was that the labor 
force — those at work or look- 
ing for work — included the 
largest proportion of the popu- 
lation since the statistics were 
first compiled. 

Most of the increase in un- 
employment was among per- 
sons who have been out of 
work for less than five weeks, 
which includes the new job 
seekers. 

With an addition of 400,000 
jobs last month, the total num- 
ber employed has risen by 3.8 
million, to 87.9 million, since 
the recession low of March 
1975. But the unemployment 
rate has remained stubbornly 


high ’ because of the rapid 
growth in the number of per- 
sons seeking jobs, which has 
been greater than in any pre- 
ious recovery from recession 
lin the last 30 years. 


Adult Women Out 
The. number unemployed in 
July was 7.-? million, up 280,000 


By LAWRENCE K; ALTMAN 

SpecU! ttToe JC?» Vort T.niw 

HARRISBURG. Pa., Aug. 6— ,vestigation in which the cause ( from June. Most cf the increase 
The death toll in the outbreak: of an outbreak is elusive. The. was among adult women, some 
of the mysterious respiratory [previous total included patients j of whom were entering or re- 
disease in Pennsylvania rose j with more general and non-! entering the labor force, 
by two to 25 as medical de- {specific flu-like symptoms. | The increase in the unem- 
tectives accelerated efforts to-: The latest fatalities werelployment rate in July was the 
day to seek a chemical or j Earl Cox, 63 years old, of Wash- [second in succession — it went 
poison as the possible cause. Jington County, and EJva Hamil-jfrom 7.3 in May to 7.5 in June 

ton, 73, of Allegheny County, | — and it raised the rate back 
the fourth woman among theito the level of last January- The 
25. Both died yesterday. I May figure, 7.3 percent, was 


At the same time, the official 
□umber of nonfatal cases was 
cut from 161 to 112 as Federal 
and Pennsylvania epidetniolo- 


Dr. Backman explained the 


gists revised their definition of 


a case by-limiting the scope of 
the symptoms. 

Dr. Leonard Bachman, the 
Pennsylvania Secretary _ of 
Heath, defined a case as one 
having the presence of either a 


new count at a news confer- 


ence. With 112 cases, including 


[the low for the recovery, whiln 
the recession peak was 8.9 per- 
cent in May 1975. 

25 deaths, the death rate isi The White House, through 
about 1 in 4.5 among those jits press secretary, Ron Nessen. 
people known to have become iconceded “disappointment” at 
ilL The death toll could rise!the July figures. But Mr. *Nes- 
further because some patients j sen emphasized the influence 


temperature of 102 degrees and! are in critical condition in hos-;of the big rise In the labor force 


Continued onPage 32, Column 6 


Abercrombie & Fitch in Bankruptcy Step 


By-JSADORE BARMASH 


customers .interested -in practi- 


■cal. and esoteric sportiiig-goods 


Abepnmbie u ^ ^ ^ g^. w 

&. Fitch Company, a mpe-store 196S .^- concern’s sales hit a, 
retaa.cfefo catering to affluent m miffinhanri its pre- 


IspffltSinefi,. announced , yestei> 


la Los. Angeles department-store 
(concern, has been appointed 
chief executive of ’ Abercrombie 
& Fitch, Harry G. Haskell, Aber- 
crombie’s chairman, said yes- 


day that- it would file; a ^^[sg66;ooiL Since- 1370, 'however, 
toy- ^ition ‘Monday for «^jsales: -have been erratic and 
k amation .-UtHleg .the hava tumed ; into losses. 

|XI provisions of the Federal j T W. year the . company had a. 
Bankruptcy Act - " deficit of $1 minio n. 

The New .York-based com-| Geoffrey’ Swaebe, former 
pany, which- earlier this week; pres jdent of the May Company, 
denied reports of the planned! 


taxLr. earnings, were ' a ‘recorditerday; -Mr.- Haskell remains 


action*, said it. would amtinnej _ 
to operate . its srores whlle it{ . 

sought coiirt protection. from^Xam h*» yo*...id 
creditors' claims until it pre-: 6 ®** " 


....17 

pared , a reorganization plazujJj£L 
The chain's main store is ••••• • * 1? 

Manhattan' at Madison Avenuefg^J ;; ; ;; JJ 

and 45th "Street . iftmtij/siyfe J4 

-Formany years.- Atenrombicr^^ ^ 
& Fitch was a mecca for nnd-*^ kks...?; 


jdle-income - ana upper-income 1 


NEWS INDEX’ 

Pve 

UariB 

Morft ... .10-12 

Holes on People. . .12 
Qbttusrtes .... -..-2? 

Op-Ed 19 

Society .. . ... M 

Sports ’.. .. . !U-1T 

TtetaS 1®-12 

TrajBporUtron ....44 
TV aed Bsdto.... <5 

Weather 44 

Non Ssstkbtj od.XMtx, ftge 31 


chairman. 

The company -did not list its 
assets or liabilities in its an- 
nouncement yesterday. 

Two weeks ago Henry C. 
Geis, treasurer, said the com- 
pany had been offered for sale, 
adding, “We just don’t .do 
enough business to support the 
overhead we have now.” On 
££i Wednesday Mr. Geis. asked to 
comment on reports that Aber- 
crombie & Fitch was planning 
to file a bankruptcy petition, 
denied having any knowledge 
of such action. 

New bank financing has been 


a cough, or any fever and X- 
ray evidence of pneumonia in 
any person who had had any 
physical association with the 
state American Legion conven- 
tion in Philadelphia July 21 to 
24. 

Such a redefinition is some- 
times made in an ongoing in- 


pitals throughout the state. and said that this factor should 
While environmental experts: not continue to play such a bif 
combed hotels in Philadelphia! role in the ratio of employed tc 
where the legionnaires ate and! unemployed in future months, 
slept to find a possible toxico- 1 The Ford Administration, he 
logic cause, health officials [said, still expects that "unem- 
stressed that they would still jployment over the' rest of tbe 


Continued on Page 9, Column 2 Continued on Page & Column 1 


Continued on Page 27, Column-' 



In Atlanta, Dr. William Kaplan studies lung tissue specimens from victims of unkn&wn 
di sease specimens are in an isolation boat, accessible only through gloved ports* 






J 




'i 







THE HEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1976 


Questions and Answers on Lebanon 


system, based on Moslem- as their last sanctuary. It is. the Palestinians to overeome ^e 
: By HENRY TANNER Christian parity. The President, only country where Iheor politi- Syrian arms blockadehv qwet- 

:■ s^iw-ra.N.wTcrtTima commander of the army, cal leaders can function freely, ly. arranging for Bulgarian 

BEIRUT, Lebanon, Aug. 6—* t | ie j, ea j of military inteHigenee an d their guerrillas are within shipments to southern Leban- 
Tbe Lebanese civil war has and the director of the Foreign reach of Israel. They want to ports. . 
gone on for 16 months. More Ministry are Maronites, mem- keep it that way. Q. J 0 

than 2(h000 people have been bers of a sect that has its own have been involved in 225^*2^* ** 

ipan 4W.UUU people nave ^ut remains m commun- the Lebanese oower strueele elected May 8? ■ • 

kflted and many more have iop ^ Vatican. In Parlia- “ A. He is living quietly in his 

5*f. n maimed. More than $2 ment the Ghnstians have sue sive Christian-dominated gov- home in Hamzrjeh, a Christian 
Mhon m public property has seats for every five for the OTments have tried-to restrict suburb of eastern Beirut He 
been destroyed; the damage in Moslems. The Moslems also m fne6m while th e Moslem is waiting- for the departure of 
private property is even greater. want Lebanon to be a full part ]eft ^ been natural alt/. President- Franjieh, whose terra 
Fprmer friends have _ become of the Arab confrontation 1 „ ** expires. Sept 23. . 


enemies and enemies friends, against IsraeL 
; Why? How? Here are some of q what do the Christians 
the answers. want? 

; Q. Is the killing as sense- ^ They say that there is 


• less as it seems? 


:-A. Not* "exactly". Behind tee SJ!es? Chians anTlSanes* ch ri a?c^ C tef pS Ration de^ril>ra^ ^^i- 

rfmmen running amok there are Moslems and that the only issue S!l5!“?e ately afterward and the Presi- 


Q. What caused Syria 
and the PJ-O. to become 
shooting enemies after 
being professed allies for 
so long? . 


Syria brought about the elec- 
tion of Mr, Sarkis by providing 
military protection and, some, 
say, funds to hesitant members 
of Parliament. But the political 


was not able to re- 
and order. The Syri- 


aftd Moslem, between rich and to see the Palestinian armed interest 8X18 dec * de f “ rte f ve !?5 

poor on both sides of the reli- presence confined to limited ™ ® °“ 

ribus tines; between Syria and places in southern Lebanon. VePajtf- 


buus uuea, ijciwccu oyua tuiu pieces in suuuieru lcuoiiuil f u. n-ia- — * —j - , . . — 

the Palestinians: between the They insist that the number of bMer - to . lake f*i r sl 

Arab states and Israel; between Palatini an civilians in Leba- the of !22£S 

the superpowers; between am- non, now about 400,000. be re- “J" e £°. f .Jj? * than to burden his sugoessot 
bilious, vain and often venal duced to 170,000, with the' rest km JhnmthSS with it; Mr. Sarkis is not known 

politicians. So political con- distributed in other Arab coun- SSS^-^efltec^ilhNS 10 have P rotestetf - « _ 
siderations at the top provide tries. .. - - . S?Ch3Sl &- m Q- 1* there any effective 

a ; framework for the anarchy as for sharing power with le-ders convinced that Eresi- national government or ad- 

and freelance killing at the the Moslems, theright-wing ^t HafS e ASad cJ Srfa mhtotrz&n? 

bottom. Christians accepted the limited Jo controfthem took *■ No - Mr - Fran . J1 ? h «“ rtuiu ? 

. Q. Who are the principal Syrian-sponsored reform pro- __ g-j—y. as it advanced to issue presidential statements 

'participants?- gfam of last February, under on hls advancea - from a villa in the' mountains^ _ 

‘.A. Syria, the Palestine Lib- which the Moslems would have Q. What are the Israelis overlooking J uni eh, the "capi- ^ two sectors picks up. The - TT-I^ 

e rati on Organization, the ah half the seats in .Parliament and doing? _ tal” of the Christian area, but cease-fires are invariably fol- lirtlTS 

lianceof nght-wing Lebanese the prime minister, who must a. They are; delighted to see he is merely the leader. of one. lowed by waves of kidnapping * ° 

Christians and -the Lebanese be a Moslem of the Sunqj sect, the' Syrians' and Palestinians at faction. The same istrue or Ra- revenge killings in this " - “ - 

leftist-Moslem alliance. would be elected by Parliament odds. It is now, just about cer- shid Karami, the Prune Minis- gmall. country- of close-knit Fn»n Psse'i CoL 4 

Q. Who makes up the instead of being named by the tain, though difficult to prove, ter, .a centrist'Moslem, who re-, families and clans. People: - - • -■ - • - * - •• 

Lebanese alliances? President, who must be a Chris- that Israel has furnished quan- signed in March.. know who killed their, friends] .whicb-was- marked with . huge 

' A. The riaht-wine Christians tian ‘ • Cities of arms to at least one . Q, How Is lhe country or relatives, and when the com- [Red Cross insignia, 

who -now raH themselves the 0- What does Syria of the right-wing Christian mili- governed? . • muni ties start mixing, thev[ The plane .has been 'bringtojg 

Lebanese Front, have three want? tia « beaded by Mr. Chamoun. a. It isn't On the Christian find the suspected killers, or i fo urgently neededraedical sup- 

main groups, each with its pri- A. The Syriahs see Lebanon Some of the Christian military side the .Phalange has set up the killers' relatives, and take plies on daily flights. No other 

vate army. One is headed by and Syria as a single area his- men are boasting about it local administrations that have their revenge. _ ; planes have been using the air- 

the outgoing President, Sulei- torically and geographically, Furthermore, the Israelis begun to organize public serv- Q m How much of the | port since mid-June. - 

man Franjieh, and his son They assert that Syrian nation- have scored some propaganda ices. Similar attempts have re- country does each side con- I Shells fell on the residential 

T-ony-, another i 5 the National al interests are vitally affected points on the border with cently been launched on the trol? . [quarters of Moslem-controlled 

Liberal Party of Interior Minis-ihy eveojthing that goes on in Lebanon. They set up a field Moslem side, but they are corn- ^ ^ Syrians control about : w ^t Beirut ail night, causing 

ter Camille Chamoun. These are, Lebanon. (Lebanon -was part of hospital for Lebanese ■ villagers plicated by the fact that the three-fifths of Lebanon, which 1 811 unknown nunajec-of civilian 

ultra-conservative, the hard-! Syria -under the Ottomans and and allowed trade mostly , in leftist-Moslem alliance is so di- ^ 0 f ^qqq square 1 casualties. • • • 

liners. The third member is the | the French; it became independ- food, across the border. verse. - - miles, or less than that of Con- i Fighting' continued during the 

Phalangist Party headed by ent in 1943). _ Q. What are the Ameri- Security, or what passes for n^eticuL The Christians andinight and early this morning 

Pierre Gemayer and his sons) Syria’s declared intention is cans doing? it, is in the hands of the local Moslems hold a fifth The i^^imd' Tell Zsatar. 

Bashir and Amin, which is more, to keep Lebanon a united coun- A Tbe u n j tet i «y a tes j, a5 militias, which have to cope Syrians control all of eastern 1 In Nabaa, a Moslem slum area 

moderate than the others and try and get the Palestinians out aide ‘ d ^ Syrian initiative » with, a great number of free- 1 Lebanon, including the BekaaiSurrouodeti bv Christian quar- 

has a larger, better organized of its internal affairs. Syria's : irnn n i ne ht close touch with lance gunmen. There are three Valley, the richest part of the Iters in the eastern suburbs of 

army. undeclared iAtention. is td Tnd^JerSalem ^to weapons for eveiy male Leba- country, from Hermel In the : Beirut, right-wing Christians 

The leftist-Moslem alliance }" tame" the Palestinian guemila ma j. e t u a£ Svrian mili- nes ® citizen, according to one north to Meriuv Ui'Urk seven • attacked with tanks and other 
°i F ™ 8re , ss T ive ^°- movement, bringing it under | la moves wiIl not t ouch 0 ff estimate. miles north of the IsraeU bor-|heavy weapons last night and 

fl8,I ^_ Pa ?Jy Jumblat Syrian control If that is i srae ii-Syrian war that Q- What about the Idea der. The Syrians also hold the -this morning add announced 

and 10 other political groups, achieved the Palestinian leaders ne?ther of partition of Lebanon? eastern slope of Mount Leba- i that they had conquered the^ 

including several Nassente — - will have to accept whatever a ,h A nil nartiMinnn. whir-h „ * ■ „ nnn Rut tha PniKtinian com.: 






Tin Rbw York Times/ Aos. 7, 1*76 

Rescue opera tkm was 
broken off at Tell Zaatar 
(panel), while Christian 
forces reported victory ht 
* Nabaa area. 


inciuamg several Nassente — win have zo accept wnatever UnifpH mvp im A.* On the record ail parties |non, which is the country's are.a- But the Palestinian com 

that is, Arab Socialist— move- Damascus decides on a settle- The United States gate up ^ Q sed t0 itt b ut it has spine, and the area northand I mand said it had been able tc 

ments and leftist Chnstian ment of the Arab-Israel! con- an y influence in Beirut last . . thmich nnt. es nr Trinni; icanrf Hnnfnmflmpnte tn ir« anal 


taken out of j..-- 
of them were sc 
' most-had- been . 
shelling during - 
'days and nighl 
the Red Cross. ’ 
Only three of 
today’s convoy 
The others ne 
' loading area. 1 
Mr. HoefHger 
and civilian oi 
sides and accus 
elements fortiie 

A Christian ( 
the shots .fired 
had come from 
rifle qrith a t 
“There was pi 
perhaps two," h 
The attempt 

civ ilians pj Tetl 

the Red Cross 
arid get but of 't 

—•a new political 




z 

ty'. 

' -V^ 

£ .SarfrrS*j| 

s'; 

i 




- mmm 


l Uie record an imiuss uuh, wruen is tne countrvrs are.a. nut tne raicsuiimu i ^ „• .. fm., • ;T. 

J ... . , , , . . . , „ (a „„ iT , „„^osed to it, but it has spine, and the area north andl mand said it had been able tOjthe Red Cross mission, said to- ^£*s. . 

ments and leftist Chnstian [ment of the Arab-Israel! con- .J” ® e ' atoatfi’ happened, though not east of Tripoli. jsend reinforcements to its small [night that the rescue of wound- J *** 

parties such as the National So- flict. month by leaving its embassy f >_ rTT ,if ro _ ’ A Mrwlpm parrison there ! ed from Tell Zaatar would not evacuate the w 

qjal Party and the Communists. The war has given the Syr- with only a caretaker staff. * ^n^thiSf’ of crossing I ^TeH^ Zaatar’ and Nabaa are | be continued unless he received fyilians. Each 

• Q. What do the Moslems ians a chance to build a strong Q. Whore do the Rus- wb at is Imown as the GreeS 3l the 'Moslem ^enclaves in Christian- indications that both sides ^tc ipenmt 

• want? front in Lebanon for the first sians stand? - • Line into Christian-held eastern between th!? coast andTl^m ' he!d territory and the Chris- could assure the safety of the 

; A. They want a greater share , Lime, f Sy ^ a “. sLrategiste have A> Moscow is embarrassed Beirut. On relatively calm days Lebanon, as well as eastern !Hans at 8 ar to take them wounded and of the Lebanese “J®'" 6 nu ^ it ** 
df political and economic [° n S that ui another war b y conflicting Syrian and Pal- some Christians cross from east Beirut 601 ! before yielding to the cease-fire i stretcher crews, all of them s,de - 

power. Their baric grievance is tiie ^eus wum sura ttu^ugn estinian appeals for support to west for business or per- Mo „|p_ t ^ .. [wanted by Syria. [volunteers. — lm.,.. 

that though they appear to be southern Lebanon to attack since Syria ^ the p lo. are sonal reasons. Many Christians, em Leh^n^ 15 !2* utb " Jean Hoefliger, the head of* Today, only 74 wounded were jkk xkw 

» majority now in the popula- Damascus from tee west rather ^ m , in pillars ^ its p o]icy - m predom inantIy Greek Orthodox. Beirut do^ '— 20 ^jg 1 - 

tion of under three million, the than across the Golan Heights. the Middle East. It is urging still live in -Moslem-controlled Tripoli ^ 50(1 the city of ^ — 

most powerful state offices are ^ Q*. what do the - caution on the Syrians without western Beirut . „ jJL' . , Cairo Paper Reports Arrest Quake in Nicaragua MSf - t«ST' 

cfrll in fhri hnnrfc nf Momnttn PfllGStilflAIlS WSilt? hrAalftmr nrith thorn At t ha * TVimma «**»* nl fKk momf ill i- » Q305t COStlV ! . . . ■ • I hf AMAf^TI A Aim Bllllto g 


in a formal way. A Moslem The Christians hold the coast IS 8 ™ 500 “ er e- :ea rrom leu ^aaiarwouianoi — » 

[would not think of crossing between Beirut and ^p^uS Tell Zaatar and Nabaa are|be contmued imless he received 
iwhat. is_ know?, .« the Green all tee towns in the mo^tain?!^^ 55 JfiS J'fS of d® 


1 ■' 




• Uoflb arc Cage! IM UUVC YVVUAiU&U UI1U Ul Ult AAI/Uliuav 

'before yielding to the cease-fire i stretcher crews, al! of them SIde - 
i wanted by Syria. [volunteers. m _ — 


Jean Hoefliger, the head of 1 Today, only 74 wounded were 




XKKXXW' 
7a Wot CM 
(2121 ‘ 


still in .the hands of Maronite 
Catholics under the old political 


Quake in Nicaragua . 


_ . — — “"“uwi uic ojriMma nriwuui wtamm tseiruu — ' - ■ somp nf tha iwtuiu rausi iiGuviwnnwi — ■ 

Palestinians want? breaking with them. At the| During erne of the many ill- fighting has iavoh^uZSS! Of kiamir Rpvolutionaries MANAGUA, Nicaragua, Aug. | 

A- Lebanon Is crucial to teem same time it is helping the -fated cease-fires traffic between. i s fand s S in Cb^^ten^t^ Isl amic Revolut ionaries g (Reuters> __ A moder ate earth | 


PBMuud ifattr. sco 
U New Turk. N. ' 

mil toy 


VAIL IDMCUmfl 


■■■wm 


- for instance. Tell Zaatar. the CAIRO, Aug. 6 (AF)— The tremor shook .pasts of Nicara-«4R^*S^^^^: 

Babin Says Lebanon War Impedes Mideast talks •& aKttfSSSSSt 4 

J y. Why do all the cease- olutionanes who allegedly want j- a o tae. m 


- By WILLIAM E. FARRELL 

h m Tbf New verk Times 


firS S d0aU ^ otetionaries who allegedly want or damage.- 

nres fail? to turn Egypt Into a strict Mos^ . .. , 


. ... to me m lor t *- 
. • r; j fflsoctchei cwdlteftj -• 

• crwttte* to IW» uw. 


! The Prime Minister said that; fofeiign troops within a wide mation campaign ta dim the A.. None of tbe major ’an- lem stete, the neWSpapQ- Alj V LAKK, GREEN GRASS, . 
the divisions within the Arabl range of our border— that is the glamour of teg RafeatlrtaUhera. Agonists have achieved, their Ahram.reported today. • THE FRESH AIR FU ND • w«l»o 


objectives. All of them, though The paper, quoting securit 


lions between Israel and the! '" e ,ve m a middle East in rection of Lebanon in the near Christians and Moslems lived dirtier and more brutal Al Ahram said the -police 

.. igrabs. But at the same time, which changes are numerous," future," the Prime Minister in peace and this coexistence than most? were still searching for the 

; he added, it has lessened the Mr- Rabin said. “The only stable said. "The central military fac- was wrecked bv the PLO" . A - , ^ roligious wars are leader, Shoukry Ahmed Moif- 
Pfospects of a united Arab dash factor in it is the Arab world’s tor in Lebanon today is the The current rifts and 'ten- 80 

W1 f h IsraeI : refusal to resign itself to the ex- Syrian Array, and they are in- sions in th^b wnrid milht add « i . that (* of “ »SP“V r^^onEnes 

-In an interview with the istence of Israel as a sovereien terested in Dreservine calm ^ Q noi d^k- Le ™. ese ’ religion was the arrested m May 1975. 

Labor Party newspaper Davar, stated sovereign uumoin preservmg^ calm change, Mr Rabin nud, , /but I most important single restraint ‘The group has cells in 

' Mr. Rabin foresaw a continua- Israel, Mr. Rabin asserted an excuse tr? intervene Bin; we SiL US lont^anH PT' entin ? individual violence, major ' towns all over Egypt 

tftvn nf thA nrntnrt** i akankoa Lebanon win be a_ long one and The war has not onlv removed and its followers, voun* uni- 


tSm of tee protracted Lebanfese wa punuing a policy of "deter- must at any rate be 'alert to cannot see its being solved in Sis f ° , i° W ? rS ' 

! 5? n ?i ct P redicted . that it rence" regarding the situation tee situation." thTnear tot™ ” y*"^. students * 


lU*f 


\p) 'i 


: ^tq u ! d n .ot be susceptible to a in Lebanon. "The fact that at Th 
quick military solution. jthe present time there, are mv said, 


The time is rioe Mr Rah in r ^ 6ven desirable, to kill lower-tncome persons who have 

id "for an elective' teforl rcieif^SSSrSlS ^ m c the . name of religion, class sensitivities and .took 
q ' f U 0 ff**! 1 povermneot, in an at- Social and economic tensions Islam as a cover' for their ac- 


Swedish Nurse Recalls 
Ordeals at Tell Zaatar 


isiam as a cover iot xneu 

J m Pj, to broaden its good- are another factor. The war tivities” Al Ahram said. ' 

fence" policy along the Leban- has given every man a gun .■ - . '• 

ese border, announced - its and, nence. the power to get Chile Ex-Aide Freed 


II? j#. • ; 

R vi 




.. , . . _ — r — o— Chile Ex-Aide Freed 

Wha l> h ® Wan , tS ‘ , SANTIAGO, Chile. Aug: ‘ 6 

S^vidiM^the o? the M Q ', ^ *¥ ere mo " (Reuters) — The former Econ- 
lsraelis could be assured Moslems than Christians. Minister of Chile, Fenvan- 

The nffpr of iqrapli apric'uitiir- Most foreign specialists do Flores Labra, was flowii to 

so. but the Christian the United States last night 

and cattle ralser^as made hy “g* ***! JhSf *** “'A 2 5 r a1- 

Reuveh Eiland, director generi £ ^ y T S ' ( u M f' ) F1 ^' 

of the Minis trv of Aericulture Chnstmire had a niajonty. The who served. under the late Pres- 
oi tne Ministry, or Agncuiture. preS ence of 400,000 PaJest in ians Went, Salvador AUende Gos- 

Visitqrs From Lebanon . further tips tee scale in favor sens, was released after a civif- 


2 ' Sp*d«l to Ttie New Tort Time* 

-BEIRUT, Lebanon, Aug. 6 — come here from ner home in 
"Sjy husband and I were stay- Karlstad, in central -Sweden, 
at his parents’ house when a * n December, 1974 in response 
rocket fell on us last June 13," 5“ app f aJs ^9™ Palestine 

'^ s ^!\ 2 7 ^ ldSwedish ”“ d S 2 SST 5 S*, « 

. -rtirse who had been m an em- refugee camps. 

;wttied Palestinian camp for- 2P she went to work at the 
jitehChs, said in an interview to- clinic at Tell Zaatar, just out-: 
■jlay. ' side the capital, and there she- 

•! 'JHe was killed instantane- me ^ her future husband, 
iK^ay, and I was badly injured," tnhough not - a doc- 

■I-* « - Sic.Te ^fTS^Sh ft 

espoixients in her small pn- father and mother at the camp. ■ 
£S 4 cr f Hospite "We got married in December 

; f.^£he Palestinian Red Crescent 1975 and moved m with my 
tiree- nules soutn of this Leb- husband's parents." Miss Stahl 
' n ^ e capitaa. sald^ Th e day of tee rocket at-' 

1 She was among the firsL tack, she said, her in-laws had 
' roup of wounded evacuated on gone to the shelter and were 


■ uesday by the International spared. 

locfrmittee 0 f the Red Cross In response to a question. 


: om the Tell Zaatar camp. Miss Stahl said she felt as much 
; hich had come under heavy a Palestinian as a Swede. She 
• lelting from rightist positions said she bad been well aware 
several months before the of the Palestinian cause before ■ 
gfjtrsts mounted an all-out of- she responded to the Palestin- 
-naive against the camp or. ian appeals for serving at 'Tell-, 
mp 22. Zaatar. 

. r Right Arm Amputated Conditions at the camp were 

... BrTT1 fc ao . _ nm very difficult, , Miss Stahl said. . 

i ^ SS? w "Because of the water shortage, 

stated and her left leg is be- it ^ t0 j^p §, e 

I g £^ ted «° r f ^ cara P clean," she said. "As a 

, t toven months of pregnancy, result, there were many flies.- 
ie, suffered a miscarriage ^ mosquiWes/ . 

' a fell on tbe camp s 5 he was wounded, 

uuc, where she was being medical Supplies were still j 
; -eatea. available. Because the main ar- ■ 

.. Her. husband, who was a tery in her injured arm had 
ember of the Popular Front been ruptured, the doctor in 
! >r the Liberation of Palestine, charge decided to amputate it, 

; .ed in the same attack. she said.' 

Speaking In English but using She was given a tetanus shot 
tabic words occasionally. Miss ind was treated by antibiotics.] 
a hi said, "If ray case has Miss Stahl said the baby shej 
■awn attention, I hope that lost was a boy. 
iis attention will make the “ 
st of the world better under- . 37 Injured in Austria 
and , the suffering of the SALZBURG, Austria. Aug. 6 
alMtinian people and their — Thirty-seven tourists, 
-, ll ( Se - mostly West Germans, were in- 

"1 am not any better than j ure d today when the mecha- 
e'hundreds of others wounded n j sm 0 f cable cars at Mount 
Tell Zaatar," she said. Kitzsteinhom south of here 
Frail, and with light brown failed and two cars ran into 
tir, Miss Stahl said she had terminating bumpers. ' 1 



The Ministry of Interior an- th® Moslems. 


Assaclatstf Press 


Eva Stahl at a hospital in 
Beirut's Moslem sector. 


□ounced that Israeli citizens 
could invite relatives living in 
Lebanon for 10-day visits so 
long as they assumed responsi- 
bility' for the costs. 

Another attempt to- reap good 
will among Lebanese living on 
the border of Israel was made 
by - Defense Minister Shimon 
Peres. Mr. Peres instructed army 
medical- clinics on the Lebanese 
border, which have been pro- 
viding medical aid recently to 
Lebanese civilians, to immunize 
Lebanese children against polio, 
cases of'jwhfch have been re- ' 
ported in southern Lebanon. 

Meanwhile the Israeli police 
tbok precautionary measures to 
prevent the spread of a minor 
Moslem-Christian incident in the 
Israeli Arab -town of Nazareth. 

A quarrel between a Moslem 
and a Christian there last night 
provoked' violence between a 
number of other Christians and 
Moslems. The clash mirrored 
the religious tensions behind tbe 
civil war in . Lebanon. 


Q. Is the end in sight? 
A. NO. 


ian court cleared him of charges 
I of misuse of public funds while 
in office. 




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TffE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7 , 1976 




Epidemic Specialists Rush 
T o Tangshan Quake Zone 


By ROSS H. MUNRO 

The Globe Bud Mill. Toronto 


PEKING, Saturday, Aug. 7 — 
Specialists in preventing and 
combating epidemic disease are 
being rushed into the Tangshan 
area, which was devastated by 


earghquake zone, they proba- 
bly number more than 10,000. 
The adjacent province of Liaon- 
ing alone, according to' a 
Hsinhua Press Agency report 


ah earthquake more than 10 'yesterday, had already sent 

■“well over 3,000 by July 31.” 


days ago. 

Provincial radio broadcasts 
indicate that authorities 
charged with medical work m 
the earthquake area have shift- 
ed the primary focus of their 
concern from immediate treat- 
ment of the iniured to prevent-! 

ing widespread disease. jsicne rrri the prevention of dis- 
The most dramatic evidence ease." Others call on people to 
of this came Thursday in a ra-|be on the lookout for cases of 
dio broadcast from KJangsi'iiu and g astro-intestinal 01- 
Province, 800 miles from thejnessss. 


In Peking authorities appear 
to be doing everything possible 
to encourage the dwellers of 
the sidewalk shantytowns to 
maintain cleanliness. Scene 
posters call on the people to 
do a good job in public hy- 


quake-afflicted area. A. radio 
station announced that 120 
anti-epidemic workers and 60 


medical workers had left the 


Groups cf people have obvi- 
ously been assigned to monitor 
the situation while others are 


ipvacuatiGT^ 
m 


provincial capital of N&nchang 
for the Tangshan area. Signifi- 
cantly, the anti-epidemic work- 
ers went by special plane while 
the medical people went by spe- 
cial train. 


frequently seen sweeping the 





‘A Mighty Army? 


areas around the shantytowns. 
As a result the city seems to 
be relatively clean and the peo- 
ple healthy. But some foreign- 
ers reported yesterday that a 
few areas were beginning to 
■ produce an unpleasant odor. 


. , ___ __ __ . ^ _ United Press In ttmaHBnil 

- AL FOR THE DEAD: Residents of. Hiroshima t American Superfortress, the Enola Gay, dropped world’s 

- ““at Japanese city yesterday; It was 31 years ! first atomic bomb, demolishing 60 percent of city and 

Monday, Aug. 6, 1945, at 9JS AJK.— that an 1 killing nearly 89,000 people. Japan surrendered Aug. 14. 


£T re °ielLi n i? ista^ed^tlEast Germany Apologizes 


been 


the aftermath of the earth- 
quake has produced many'fac- 
tors that could lead to disease 
of. • epidemic proportions. 
Among the probable problems 


arts Scandal Sears Tanaka Hometown 


EW H. MALCOLM 

■ The New York Timet 

AMA, Japan, Aug. 
- former Prime, 
lakuer Tanaka once- 
as the place where 
i father and gentle 
ived, where you 
could always find 
your ' childhood 
friends, and 
whose green 
a fields, rolling 
. hills and - fresh 
remained- with you 


lives of the 8,500 scattered 
residents of Nishiyama (liter- 
ally, West Mountain). 

They would really rather 
not talk about ^heir native 
sort, Japan's only Prime Min- 
ister to come from the Prov- 
ince of Niigata. When 
pressed, . his friends -and 
neighbors say the arrest.ii-a 
tragedy and they feel sorry 
for his' 84-year-old mother, 
who still lives here. 


Mr. Tanaka's ho me- 
lt he cannot come 
v because he is in 
bring Kosuge Prison 




naka is accused of 
t yet bfeught to 
-involvement in the 
>n-dollar Lockheed 
bribery scandal 
.recked Japan right 
this mountain vii- 
arrest oF. Mr. Tan- 
ily 27, a stunning 
"development in Ja- 
s; t6 be about the 
iiiidant note in the 


’Very Regrettable Affair* 

“It is a very regrettable, 
affair,” said. Ichiji Tanaka, 
Superintendent of Schools 
and one of the many unre- 
lated Tanakas who live around 
Nishiyama. 

Here on May 4, 1918, Ka~ 
kuei was born to Kakuji 
■ and Fume Tanaka, two of the 
hard-working fanners whose 
summer days began before, 
dawn and ended in the eve- 
ning, when fireflies hover 
over the rice jiaddies that 
blanket this area like corn- 
fields in Illinois. . 

The . youngster grew up 
among file stubby, tree-cov- 


ered mountains just in from 
the Japan Sea. Here he. had 
a nearly fatal bout with 
diphtheria, played on bamboo 
stilts and began a brief edu- 
cation m an old schoolhouse. 
There, his second - grade 
teacher, Mitsugi Ito, detected 
the glimmer of leadership and 
determination that were to 
help Mr. Tanaka become the 
youngest Prime Minister in 
postwar Japan in 1972. 

“‘I believe;*’ Mr. Tanaka 
wrote in his best-selling book 
“Building a New 'Japan," 
"that the endless fountain 
of energy that has built to- 
day’s Japan derives from the 
cherished and respected 
rural homes from which all 
of us have originally come.’* 
. But Mr. Tanaka, like mil- 
lions of Japanese in recent 
decades, left for the big city, 
Tokyo, 135 miles to the 
south. Mr. Ito estimates that 
at least .half his students, 
mostly the men. have left 
Nishiyama over the years. 

They walked down . to a 
pebbled road or, in later 
years, took the bus through. 



_ __ ..... . IJ» RaM-York ThMs/tOndakB. YodibaM 

•ine hi Nishiyama, Mitsugi Ito, a 70 -year-bid teacher, recalls one of his students, 
Jamaica; now Jn jail for bis alleged involvement Iri the Lockheed bribery scaadaL . 
v don’t .want 'to believe these charges against Tanaka-san,” says Mr. Ito. 4. 


the tunnel, past the little 
low houses with thatched or 
blue slate roofs, around the 
carp ponds, the dump and 
the Honda shop toward the 
railroad station that is the 
focus of so many Japanese 
communities. Even today 
roadside tree branches still 
brush bus windows and spill 
sudden showers on passen- 
gers' knees. 

The population drain, and 
the resulting local decline, 
has been a problem shared 
by many Japanese as well as 
American towns. 

“Youngsters are our trfwn 
treasure,” said Sakashi 
Hatton, a municipal official. 
"We really want them to stay 
and share in building our fu- 
ture." 

The village began an .ener- 
getic effort to attract medi- 
um-sized industries. It subsi- 
dized industrial investment 
and sports, cultural and. 
youth activities. It even lev- 
eled a few hills to provide 
land for the young marrieds 
who increasingly choose to 
break tradition and live apart 
from their parents. 

All this, combined with the 
improvement of transports* 
* : on links v.lth the cities srd 
the spread of television .sir.- 
. ““If. has brought, most of r ! v 

• rd vantages of 'city life \v F ': t \n 
the reach of rural dwellers. 

Making a U-Tum - 

The result has been the 50- 
czlled U-turn phenomenon, 
with many younger people 
returning to" their home- 
towns. not to farm but to 

• work in offices and factories. 

•T feel more comfortable 
here," said Masao Nakazawe, 
who spent three years on the 
Yokohama docks. “I have 
learned that city life is not 
so rosy." 

• “I once had a longing for 
urban life," said Mr. Hatton, 
the official, “but no more. 
This is my home. And when 
I wake up each morning the 
air is so clean, the hills are 
so green, with pockets of 
mist in the trees, and eveiv^ 
thing is quiet but thebirds.-' 

One of those who have not 

■ returned is Mr. Tanaka, 
whose visits grew infrequent 
■and seemed timed for elec- 

■ tion activities in his district. 

He was last here April 24 
to visit bis father’s grave on 
the seventh . anniversary of 
his death, a Buddhist custom. 
His mother lives behind tall, 
locked gates .in one of. her; 
son's many houses, a grace- 
ful, two-story wooden struc- 
ture that tourists frequently 
photograph how." " 


For Fatal Shooting of Italian 


Sped*! 10 The New York Times 

EAST BERLIN, Aug. 6— Thej 
... .East German Government apol- [ 
are- impure ;vater. a disrupt ion Jagfeed to Italy today over the 


of sewage disposal, exposure of; k iUi rg 'bf an Italian by an East 
the homeless to the hot and German border guard yesterday 
until recently wet weather, the morning at a highway crossing 
.v- between E^t and West Ger- 


ity of the Injured to 
id the cramped quar- 


vulnerabili 
disease an 

tens in which many survivors 
are believed to be living. } 

Altogether, the Kiangsi radio 
station declared, “a mighty army 
of 700 people in medical serv- 
ice teams” has been formed in 
the province to go to the Tang- 
shan area. Transport workers 
have pledged to provide a spe- 
cial train for the medical serv- 
ices team and for whatever 
drugs the people in the quake 
area need: 

A radio station in Shanghai 
rlso drew special attention to 


many. 

A spokesman for the Italian 
Embassy said that Herbert 
Krolikowski, the East German 
Deputy Foreign Minister, ex- 
pressed his country's regret at 
the shooting of the Italian, 
Benito Corghi, a 38-year-old 
truck driver and a member of 
his country’s Communist Party. 

The incident, near Hirschberg 
at a crossing between East Ger- 
many and Bavaria, was one of 
a series of such cases that have 
aroused both sides. Mr. Corghi, 
who had forgotten his pass- 


the ?nt : -epidemic workers m-'P^ ^nd had returned to the 
eluded in a contingent rf 900, ^t Germar iside to get it, was 
radical -orkcT-: llavinT that^ot to death by an East Ger- 
citv for the earthquake area. i man as he approached 

Although Chinese authorities^, 1 ™ sm S on ,00t to rach 

have not announced the total j I ; . 

number of medical people now COUNTRY FUN FOR KIDS 
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THE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST1,im 


-i- ' : V. ~ V.jrwfe 






1. iVC 


j* 


Ethiopia Cautioned on Anti-U. Si Position 


By DAVID BINDER 

Spedij wn»SewTerkTP»® 

WASHINGTON, Aug. 6— The 
Ford Administration cautioned 
the military Government of 
Ethiopia today against adopting 
lan anti-American position, in- 
dicating that this could affect 
United States military and eco- 
nomic ’assistance programs. 

The warning came from Wil- 
liam E. Schaufele Jr., Assistant 

Secretary of State for Aft 1 “nj Ababa had- re^tiy' published 
Affairs, in testimony before ti^stndent -‘attacks.” onthe-Urut- 


■gime which assumed power ln 
1974." ■; ; 

Mr. Sdiaufela added' that this 
jxenuuk was ^caationaiy”-, 

“If things develop in su ad- 
vert 'fashion it could affect 
our programs/" he said, in what 
appeared to be the strongest 
public statement by the Admin- 
istration on developments since 
Ethiopia was plunged into in- 
ternal tunuojl late last winter. 


He .acknowledged that th&ljm 
Government jpress ; in Addis 1 - 


. manag fa g the eoiinfrtfs deteri 
j orating economy and-beset by 
^ ‘insurgencies and incipient in-| 
surgendfes” * ._ 

■ Fighting Insurgents 
; He acknowledged - that the 
military go vernment was using 
American-supplied arms against 
the Eritrean secessionist move- 
ment in the north and tb 
h pinh civilians in other regions 
where rebellions had sprung 


strident "attacks." on.tfcfrUnifc- 
ed States aad^e noted that the 

Ethiopian leadership lad start- 

In response to questions by ^ proeraa'of internal. poll 
orator Dick Clark, Democrat^, * - 


Senate Foreign Relations ^sub- 
committee on African affairs. 


ISenator 

of Iowa, Mr. Schaufele said he 
believed that “although the 
.Government is trying to set up 
a leftist, socialist system, it is 
not systematically or instinc- 
tively anti-U.S.” 

Strong Statement 

But after noting that the 
United States had supplied S350 
million in economic aid and 
$275 million in military aid 
since 1952, he said: “This de- 
gree of cooperation with Ethi- 
opia will depend largely, on the 
course finally takes by the 


cies that were “socialist, in 
Idoctrine?:. though “imperfectly 
carried out.” - <■'/ 

'As a result : of the turmoil 
in Ethiopia and “constant pres- 
sures” from various American 
quarters -to alter the American 
aid policy, Mr. Schaufele said 
the Administration's position 
was “in constant review.” 

In response to further ques-j 
dons by Senator Clark, the 
'subcommittee chairman, Mr. 
Schaufele described the Ethi- 
opian ' Government as “un- 
stable,” prone <to violations of 


new revolutionary military re- (hum an rights, incapable of 


Hie United States has re- 
peatedly expressed concern to 
Ihef Dergue, the Ethiopian term 
for the ruling military junta, 
about Si-treatment of political 
Iprisoners, believed to number 
over - 1,000, Mir. Schaufele .said. 
‘ Nevertheless, he said, the 
Administration intends to con- 
tinue its ald programs in the 
belief, that they help preserve 
aV longtime relationship be- 
tween the two countries and 
help to guard American strate- 
gic interests in the region: :■ ’ 

: - The Clark subcommittee has 
been holding a series of hear- 
ings on American interests in 
and policies toward the coun- 
tries of the Horn of Africa— 
Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya, and 
the French Territory of Afa 
and.Issas. . T'*- 


Shots Again Rout Blacks in Soweto 


Continued From Page 1, Col, 2 

sons were wounded by police 
bullets during the day. Spokes- 
men insisted, as they have since 
the disturbances began three 
days ago, that the riot squads 
were using tear gas and firing 
over the heads of demonstrators 
wherever possible and shooting 
to wound only as a last resort. 

Official casualty figures con- 
tinued to conflict with the com 


to go home almost as soon as 
they arrived. 

Frequently, the demonstra- 
tors warned the township's 
220,000 commuters of retribu- 
tion if they went to work. An- 
other tactic was roadblocks. 


So far mere has been no com- 
ment on the upheavals from 
Prime Minister Jobs Vostpr. 
Gen. Gert Prinsloo, the 'na- 
tional police commissioner, has! 
rejected the demonstrators' de-il 
mand for the release of all stu- 


made of abandoned cars, acrossMents detained during the June 
the streets leading out of the} riotin & Tins week’s march on 
township toward Johannesburg > ] j ‘ ohanncs b ur g was have ended 


nine miles northeast. The road- 
blocks appeared to be well or- 
ganized. Small 


at police complex where stu-j 
dent leaders were to have peri- 
ls arrived]*! 00 ®* 1 * or *be release of the 

(Nations in the local press.- Thelto man them before daybreak. (detainees. ; • ' 

Star, the city's largest paper. The Putco Bus Company, op-i.. S 

put the death toll at seven, but! e rating between the township !^°!£ 
this appeared to include twoiand the city, suspended opera-, 
persons who fell or were) tions after several- of its vehi- ^ A] f 
pushed under trains, a girl [cies were attacked and set ^0?^, 
trampled to death in a stam- afire. In one incident, youths j ^ 
pede and a man who broke his (entered the bus, ordered thel s T stem . of fall re 

neck today when he leaped! driver off and commandeered ;pl f ces ,i°, ”?***!“ demands of 
through a window of a bus thatjthe bus to be used in a road-{ a oancifuI of studen ts, he said, 
was being stoned. (block. Buses that kept going; 

Soweto township, reopened to j were stoned; once they stopped,, 

their tires were slashed. L . , _ . _ _ , , 

Hie bus company resumed 




whites yesterday, was sealed 
off again when fresh trouble be- 
gan at dawn. But accounts by 
black reporters indicated that 
the demonstrators, most of 
them youthful, had abandoned 
attempts to march on Johannes- 
burg and were concentrating on 
their other objective — mass ab- 
senteeism by black workers em- 
ployed by white factories and 
businesses in Johannesburg. 

Students and others at- 
tempted yesterday and Wednes- 
day to march from Soweto 
to Johannesburg to demand the 
release of students detained in 
connection with the violence 
that broke out in June in the 
township and spread to others. 
The issue originally was the 
use of Afrikaans- in the black 
schools. 

Both days, the police resisted 
the marchers strongly, opening 
fire again and again. Today, 
apparently considering the risk 
too great, the young protesters 
turned te the work boycott, 
with mixed results. 

On Wednesday and again 
yesterday, absenteeism at com- 
panies in Johannesburg ranged 
from a quarter to three-quarters 
of the work force. But today, 
despite widespread stoning and 
burning of all forms of trans- 
port, many companies reported 
that absenteeism was sharply 
down. In some cases, attend- 
ance was said to be as high as 
four out of five. However, many 
workers asked for permission 


A Leader Found Hang ed 
KING WILLIAMS TOWN,! 


township later in the day. Ieav-1 ^ Tem>rism Act i 

Sniff hiS 

At the bus depot in JohannK- j ^Th^ls^yeiMld'j^Mohapl, 
bur& many feared being robbed j a mein b er y e> f yjj south African 
of their pay envelopes, which ; Studratj r organization. 


arV customarily given out on 
Fridays. 

Schools Are Nearly Empty 
The d«ii castrations again left 
schools in the township nearly 
deserted. Health clinics, ooe 
target of the anti-Govemraent 
rioting that swept the town- 
ship in June, were dosed. 

Police units were assigned to 
guard other Government build- 
ings, and to keep watch over 


was 

taken, into custody on July 17 
when he was the administrator 
of a trust fund to aid former 
political prisoners and their 
families. Members of his family 
have been given permission to 
attend a post-mortem examina- 
tion. 


U-N. Group in Appeal 

Special to The Sew Yortc TUn** 

UNITED NATIONS;. N.Y. 
the home of the “'mayor” of the|j5*> 


township, T. J. Makhaya. A 


action to “isolate? the South 


Kenya and Uganda in Accord 
On Ending Hostility and Threats 


ssss 

liberation movements. 

In a report on the unrest 
in Soweto, the Special Com- 
mittee against Apartheid said 
the demonstrations there “have 
shown that there can be no 
solution to the grave situation 
in South Africa without the 
replacement of the minority 
racist regime by a government 
based, on the principle of 
equality and the exercise of the 
right of self-determination by 
all the people.” 

Former President 
Reported Arrested 
By Argentine Amy 


the house two nights ago. 

Mr. Makhaya and other mem- 
bers of the Urban Bantu Coun- 
cil, an advisory body that has 
been involved in negotiations 
with the Government since the 
June upheaval, have been ac- 
cused of being puppets for the 
white authorities. 

In Orlando, a Soweto suburb, 
shots were fired at demonstra- 
tors who attacked a recreation 
center. A crowd that gathered 
near a railway station in the 
suburb of Dube was fired on. 
Press reports, denied by the 
police, said that at least L4 peo- 
ple were injured at the station. 


NAIROBI, Kenya, Aug. 6[question. Kenya has said. that 




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(Reuters) — Delegates from 
Kenya and Uganda formally 
agreed today to end their state 
of belligerency and resume nor- 
mal relations. 

The tensions between the 
countries stemmed in part from 
the Israeli raid last month on 
Entebbe airport, in which the 
Ugandans said the Kenyans had 
played a. role. Uganda charged 
further That following the En- 
tebbe raid. Kenya imposed an 
economic blockade on its land- 
locked southern . neighbor. 
Kenya denied both charges. 

The' agreement was in the 
form of a joint communique 


signed at a public session after 
three days of private taiks here. 
The statement stressed that its 
provisions Were subject to rati- 
fication by the presidents 


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of 

each country. 

Four Points Are Stressed 

The communique said that 
Kenya and Uganda - agreed on 
these main points: 

^Threats of use of force 
should cease forthwith. 

flThe state of belligerency 
should cease. 

9 Any troops stationed on. the 
common border should be with- 
draws. 

§Each country should refrain 
from broadcasting and publish- 
ing hostile propaganda about 
the other. . 

Both sides agreed on a “mem- 
orandum of understanding” 
stipulating each country's obli- 
gations and duties under inter- 
national law, “in particular, 
compensation for loss of life 
and property." 

Kenya has accused Uganda 
of the indiscriminate mass mur- 
der of Kenyans in Uganda and 
has charged that Uganda troops 
had appropriated Kenyan 
assets in Uganda. 

The communique said Kenya 
and Uganda agreed to a free 
flow of traffic between the 
countries, that debts should be 
paid and a joint committee be 
set up to examine ths debt 


Uganda owes it $50 miiiion. 

President Idi Amin of Uganda 
has threatened Kenya with war 
several times since the Entebbe 
raid, in which Israeli comman- 
dos rescued Israeli and other 
hostages of an airliner hijack- 
ing. The plane was seized over 
Greece and the pilot forced to 
fly to Uganda, where the hos- 
tages remained for several days 
before the raid came. 

Foreign Minister Munyua 
Waiyaki of Kenya said that the 
Secretary General of the Organ- 
ization of African Unity, Wil- 
liam Eteki Mboumoua, would 
go to Kampala and present 
President Amin with the memo- 
randum of understanding for 

signing. 

He would then take it to 
Kenya to be signed by President 
Jomo Kenyatta. Mr. Eteki at- 
tended the talks as an observer. 

The only point not covered 
specifically in the communique 
was the question of Uganda’s 
territorial claims on Kenya, but 
it was said that these could be 
considered included by implica- 
tion. In February President 
Amin said large areas of Kenya 
belonged historically to Ugauda 
but he has since recanted. 

Kenyatta Asked to Step In 
LONDON, Aug. 6 (Reuters)— 
President Amin said today that 
he would ask President Kenyat- 
te to act as a go-between with 
Britain in efforts to normalize 
relations, the Uganda radio re- 


BUENOS AIRES, Aug. 6 (AP) 
— The private news agency 
Noticias Argentinas said today 
that former President Alejan- 
dro A. Lamisse had been 
placed in custody at an army 
base by the military Govern- 
ment 

It gave no reason fa* the 
detention of General Lanusse, 
a retired array officer, but it 
said that he would be held 
for five days as "punishment” 
(General Lanusse’s family con- 
firmed that he had been ar- 
rested and told he would be 
held for five days, Reuters re- 
ported.] 

Two days ago General 
Lanusse, 58 years old, issued 
an open letter asking for 
moderation apd respect for 
human rights. He made the 
appeal after the Government 
announced the arrests' of 19 
university professors .as “left- 
ist infiltrators.” It said that 
Gustavo Malek, who had 
served as education minister 
under General Lanusse, was 
being sought. 

Mr. Malek is in Uruguay, 
where he was installed Wednes- 
day as regional director of the 
United Nations Educational, 

Scientific and Cultural Organi- 
zation. 

General Lanusse became 
president in 1971 when he was 
commander in chief of the 
army and seized power from 
another generaL He stepped 
down in 1973 to permit free 
elections which were won by 
the Peronists. 

The armed forces returned 

_ to powfer last March with a 

ported. [coup against President Isabel 

Field Marshal Amin expressed [Martinez de Perdii. She has 


confidence that Mr. Kenyatta 
would not fail, “because he is 
a very good friend of Britain 
ana an eider statesman of East 
Africa," the broadcast said. 

Britain severed relations with 
Uganda on July 28. citing a 
series of provocations. The 
radio, monitored here, was re- 
porting on a meeting between 
President Amin and Uganda's 
former High Commissioner to 
Britain. Frederick Kiiragura 

Isinpoma. 


been charged with misuse of 
public- funds and is being 
held . under guard at a resort 
hotel; 


Canadians Starting Search 
HALIFAX, Canada, Aug. 6 
(AP)— The Canadian destroyer 
Athabaskan was to begin 
searching off Newfoundland to- 
day for a Soviet military plane, 
believed to have crashed, eir 
route from Cuba to the Soviet 
Uni 


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THE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY,' AUGUST 7, 1975 


Ford Asks Personal Data 
In Running-Mate Search 


j*-’ r 1 * ^ 


By JAMES M. NAUGEtTON 

Special to Hie »ew To* TJbM 


WASHWTON, 
President Fold st 
^search for a running 


6 — 

up Ins 

mate 


i i 


i i 


today by undertaking an exami- 
nation of ibepereoaal back- 
grounds and finances of*a score 
of prospective VSce-Presideotial 
nominees. 

<Bon Nessen, tfce White House 
•res secretary, said that Mr. 
ord would eliminate -from con- 
si deration. anyone who would] 
-refuse, if mxninated, -to make 
'public the details of the 
indivi dual's health, personal net 
.worth end tax payments for the 




The description of the plans 
to explore the backgrounds of 
potential Ford running mates 
appeared to be designed an part 
to divert attention from the 
controversy swhfeig about for- 
mer Gov. John B. GonnaHy of (telephone.- 


Committee’s impeachment in- 
quiry in 1974, Representatives 
William S. Cohen of Maine and 
Thomas F. RaSback of IlHnois, 
have urged the President to ex- 
amine the foil record of the 
Watergate scandal to explore 
any connections that Mr. Con- 
naUy, the former. Secretary- of 
the Treasury, might have had 
with Watergate. 

Also, The Wall Street Journal 
reported in its editions this 
morning that Philip W. B lichen, 
the. White House legal counsel, 
was planning to ask Leon A. 
Jaworeki, the former Watergate 
special prosecutor if there were 
any reasons why Mr. Conn ally 
might not be suitable as a Vice- 
Presidential candidate., Mr. Bu- 
chan did not respond to at- 
tempts today to reach him by 


i ! :« 


_ — „ _ _ prospect on the 

-Presaden^s hst. 

* Mr. Connaily, who was ac- 
quitted 16 mouths ago of 

"charges that he accepted 
bribe in return for securmg 
higher Federal price supports 
-Tor milk producers, has sought 
without much success to quiet 
public debate about his 
.strengths and weaknesses on a 
^Republican ticket. ‘ 

Data to Be Sought 
■■ The White House spokesman 
■said that, starting tomorrow , 
Mr. Ford’s aides would ask 
"teach of those on the President's 
-list of prospective ticket mates 
-to provide health, financial and 
tax data in confidence. 

Also, Mr. Nessen said, the in- 
dividuals will be asked to per- 
mit White House officials to 
'-conduct confidential investiga- 
tions into their character and 
qualifications. 

Mr. Nessen refused to 
Jiow many or which Republi- 
cans were involved in the 
examination. Other White 
House officials said# however, 
that Mr. Ford was currently 
focusing on 15 to 20 individu- 
als, including Mr. Connaily. 

According to Mir. Nessen, 
£ach of the individuals will be 
jjked if he is interested in join- 
teg a Ford ticket If so, Mr. 

: Sessen said, he must provide 
$e requested data by the end 

# next week. Mr. Nessen said 
bat lie President might meet' 

1 frith the finalist in the selection 
/process — but would do so pri- 
; rately, without identifying any 
■Of them — and that Mr. Ford 
would stipulate that his final 
choice must make the informa- 
tion public. 

Two Republicans who served 
on the House Judiciary 


Mr. Connaily said earlier this 
week in Cleveland that it would 
be “the grossest . kind of mis- 
conduct” to attempt to link him 
to Watergate and thus ‘‘be- 
smirch” h?m. 

Mr. Raiisback told reporters 
Illinois today that he had 


m 


no intention of 


to “sub- 


f trying t 

marine" Mr. Connaffy’s pros- 


pects but was concerned that 
it would -facilitate efforts by 
the Democrats to make Water- 
gate a campaign issue if 
former President Nixon’s Secre- 
of the Treasury was on the 


Mr. Nessen declined to enter- 
tain any questions -about Mr. 
Connaily or to say whether the 
White House planned to consult 
Mr. Jaworeki about him. 

But the Presidential spokes- 
man stressed that Mr. Ford was] 
engaging in a “comprehensive 
and complex method” of sifting 
through a list of potential run- 
ng mates to find' “the very 
ghest quality person.' 

The process Mr. Ford has set 
in motion included a check by 
mail of the running -male 
recommendations of about 


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AssscbMPrai 

Ronald Reagan is Introduced, to Pennsylvania delegatwn 
in Philadelphia, by Senator Richard S. Schweiker as the 
two continue search for Republican delegates. 


•>-«r 




- • 


■ ,.-tv 


By CHARLES MOffit 




; ftLA&ts/ ^Gffc£ FAu& 6— lie lastT water waj drained 

« farm . from' a 3&-acre fenn jwud 


4wnd today, caught a barrel-: 
Mi-.ot^isb'&twa jt tend.dis-- 
-missed -a- suggfestion -by'- the 1 

• waj “n^fch-/. 

imr v 


'Garter, .outr4 red/xjbbok at 
. tbe a : bew.‘rest2u- 

.riantui this htdetovpn^583 . 
-peop)?, ^ahd fissed ' - protee- 
, tryely^ oyer' Ta . .10-^ ’ " 
from nearby Coluki)US- 


fhouse,” 

* yeais,>; 
his - motiier, 
when jht zstmaed in aid 
homfiskfc front a two-yesy. 
tour ■ in India' 1 as: - a- Peace v 
C«i»s,TOluzrt3&r.7 .■ j; 

The house- has recently-* 
heentSe guest home of Sena- [ 
tor- Waiter F: - Mondale, Mr.^- 
. Carter's runmng rinate, and< ; 
; r has seen a stream of profes- 


' ba3. wtm.a^ree tour,of Plains -'. /sots ^ and! former -bureaucrats 
in a radio station earnest/ cm&e. antf go. 'as they briefed ' 
The rest auran t is- called The/ Mr.- Carter- and- Senator Mon- 
Back Porch its crohers.and T dale on economcs, defense 
Qaihe^ Bourn bysome-ofthe - amtfor^n pd&y. - 
.press.. ■ ’ • - t* 7 vj Mr. Carter was joined in 

In short, He in Plains con-- - ?the ~ pond by iris brother, 
tpjtted in, its sfoWj even tenor - JBiHy. two of his sons, iris 8- 


as Mr. Carter;" the Democrat- 
ic, PresidMirial nominee, pre- - 
pared, planned az^L^ ^rested for'' 
a fall general election cam? 
fcftign «8t Be is to. fbnnally 
iiiaogurate on Labor Day. . 

^ Mr. Carte - , drrased in- a 
straw hat, .^d pants and shirt! 
and well-weatfaered- sneakers, 
/helped net fish in a; Swtri of" 
muddy water and “slime .as 


Schweiker Reports New Delegate Gains 


5,000 convention delegates and] with Mr. Reagan, the Senator 


alternates, Republican members 
of Congress and officeholders 
and party leaders across the 
nation. It resembled the elabo- 
rate screening process that 
preceded Jimmy Carter’s selec- 
tion of Senator Walter F. Mon- 
dale of Minnesota as his run- 
ning mate on the Democratic 
ticket 

Mr. Ford said at two news 
conferences last month that he 
did not need to make an ex- 
haustive survey at potential 
running mates because ‘1 know 
all of the people quite intimate- 
ly.” 


By JON NORDHEIMER 

Special toTbenev rsdcTimca 

PHILADELPHIA. Aug. 
Senator Richard S. Schweiker 
said today that he and'Rooald 
Reagan had picked - up new 
commitments from an unspeci- 
fied number of Republican dele- 
gates in his home state of 
Pennsylvania. But he steadfast- 
ly declined to name them. 

He said that their names may 
not be released until next week 
because of fear that the cam- 
paign workers of President Ford 
.t harass them. 

Earlier, at a news conference 


asserted that five Pennsylvania 
delegates who switched their 
allegiance to the Reagan- 
Schweiker ticket had come un- 
der ''horrendous, heavy-handed 
pressure.” For this reason, he 
said, the -delegates who sub- 
sequently switched to Mr. Rea- 
gan would go nameless. 

A check by newsmen of dele- 
gates who last week switched 
to Mr. Reagan when he selected 
the liberal Northern Senator as 
his running mate did not turn 
up any who said they had felt 
the kind of “tremendous” pres- 
sure mentioned by the Senator. 


President ’ Ford’S campai 
aides in the state rejected t 
charges. They said Mr. Schweik- 
ei's statement was a “trans- 
parent” move to avoid the' em- 
barrassment of not having ad- 
ditional delegates switch to Mr. 
Reagan. 

Asked. by newsmen at the 
late-afteraoon news conference 
for substantive proof of' the 
new commitments, Mr. Schweik- 
er skirted the demand by say- 
ing it was the delegates’ choice 
to remain anonymous. 

. "We’re going to. be guided 
by the delegates who don’t 
want to be pressured like Ping- 
Pong . balls “declared Mr. 
Schweiker, who arrived here 
from New Jersey with Mr. 
Reagan. 

There was one delegate shift 
from uncommitted to Mr. Ford 
today, leaving The New York 
Times’s tally at 1,109 for 
President Ford, 21 short of thei 
number needed to nominate; 
1,033 for Mr. Reagan and T 17 
uncommitted. The Pennsylvania 
breakdown was 77 for Mr. 
Ford, 10 tor Mr. Reagan and 16 
uncommitted. 

The news conference today 
was the fourth Mr. Reagan and 


Sears Hopes for 15 to 20 Reagan Votes in Jersey 


i'i i 


i < 


I ! 


By JOSEPH F. SULLIVAN 

; Spedal to 13te New York Tine* 

1 ELIZABETH, N. J., Aug. 6—, 
John P. Seazs, Ronald Reagan’s 
. aational campaign manager, 
.. said today that he was delight- 
, ed when four of New Jersey’s 
' 1 S7 delegates to the Republican 
National Convention an- 
nounced their support for Mr. 
Reagan last night 

“At least people won’t be able 
to say New Jersey is 67 to 
far Mr. Ford any more,” he 

■ said. 

He also said that the action 
. of the four delegates would en- 
tourage others to step forward 
. in the next few days and could 
] lead to the eventual capture of 
, ]5 to 20 delegate votes by Mr. 
■cagan. by convention time. 

The thrust of the Reagan 
' inference with 'delegates at 
the Holiday Inn near Newark 
, airport, as seen by Mr. Sears 
: md his aides, was that the 
Northeast -strategy that 
presents Mr, Reagan and his 
‘ ^ice-presidential choice, Sena- 
tor Richard S. Schweiker of 
Pennsylvania, as a “balanced 
!eam ,r was beginning to pay 
■- dividends. 

However, there appeared to 
. ,Fe little to warrant his opti- 
mism as far as the New Jersey 
delegation was concerned. Only 
ibout 20 delegates attended the 
, inference, about one-third the 
1 number that showed up for the 
! *st Reagan reception a month 
. ago. 

? If anything." the lines ap- 
- feared to be getting more clear- 
• y defined, with most of those 

■ nterviewed after the reception 
laying that the meeting had 

. >een cordial, that Mr. Reagan 
; lad been impressive but thatj 
. -hey still intended to vote for 
; President Ford, 

Reagan Gain Doubted 


Reagan delegates three of the 
four delegates who announced 
their position last night. They 


had been counted arnpng thejthe campaign manager for An- 


I “He didn’t change a vote, 
‘Bid State Senator Garrett W. 
; ‘lagedorn, a Bergen County 
i lelegatej *Tf anything the [Mr. 
i Reagan and Mr. Schweiker] 
founded apologetic when they 
.; Tied to explain Senator 
1 schweiker* s votes to override 
! President Ford on some of his 

• retoes. 

• State Senator John Littel of 
Warren County and Andrew 


seven uncommitted delegates 
mentioned by -Senator Cli 
P. Case, the delegation leader, 
when he announced a few days 
ago that 60 of the state’s 67 
delegates had told him they 
would vote for Mr. Ford at the 
convention. 

The four who announced last 
night were Thomas Bruinooge 
of Allendale; F. .Walton Wanner 
of River Edge, Joseph Yglesias 
of Bayonne and Donald Katz 
of Perth Amboy. 

According to a canvass by 
the New York 'Times. Mr. Wan- 
ner had been counted as a Ford 
delegate, so the new state 
breakdown showed 59 votes for 
Mr. Ford, four announced for 
Mr. Reagan and four uncommit- 
ted. ■ 

Some Others Invited 
The uncommitted list includes 
Andre Gruber, the Middlesex 
County chairman, and Eudora 
A. Pike, another Middlesex 
delegate; Joseph Pious ky of Jer- 
sey City and Richard Trabert 
of Westfield. 

Mr.. Gruber and Mrs. Fike 
were invited* to the private 
meeting with Mr. Reagan and 
Mr. Schweiker along with the 
four who announced for Mr. 
Reagan immediately after the 
eonence. Mr. Gruber and 
Mrs. Fike remain u n comm i tted, 
however, and Mr. Sears would 
oot disclose their names to 
newsmen after the meeting. 

The State Assembly minority 
leader, Thomas H. Kean, Presi- 
dent Ford’s New Jersey cam- 
paign chairman, who is a dele- 
gate, said, that the estimate of 
at least 60 'votes for the Presi- 
dent “is solid.” Other Fond sup- 
porters said they still hoped to 
win over Mir. Gruber. If they 
succeed, Mrs. Fike, who is lean- 
now toward Mr. Reagan, 
is expected to touow suit 
Hie support for Mr. Reagan 
among members of the Hudson 
and Middlesex County Repub- 
lican delegations stems from 
the belief of local party leaders 
that Mr. Reagan will be able 
to help them more in November 
in their perennial battles with 


' rirpok, the Hunterdon County 
. Republican chairman, both con- 
J; /ention delegates, also said 
j hat they sensed none of the 
;ubtle movement toward Mr. 
- Reagan that Mr. Sears said he 
.; perceived. 

Actually, Mr. Sears said at 
i news conference that for 
no re them two weeks he had 
; jeen counting in his total of 


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stronger blue-oolSar, conserva- 
tive De mo cr al ac organizations. 
Mr. Yglesias, for example, is 


thony Campemid, the Republi- 
can, candidate for. the House m 
Hudson County. The last time 
a Republican was elected to 
Congress from Hudson was in 
the Eisenhower years, and the 
surprised winner announced al- 
most immediately that he was 
“ " » 


In explaining his decision to 
announce, last night, Mr. Ygle- 
sias said he had a more definite 
commitment of campaign help 
from, the Reagan forces than 
he was able to obtain from Mr. 
Ford’£ aides. 

However, it remains unclear 
whether Mr. Yglesias will ever 
get to cast his vote for Mr. Rea- 
gan. He was elected as an alter- 
nate and contends he ' was a 
pointed by the Hudson Repub 
can chairman, Anthony Cilento, 
to replace Peter D. Morgan, a 
delegate who died- of a heart 
attack about three weeks ago 
Credentials Interpretation 
Anne Flynn, a member of the 
National Credentials Commit- 
tee, said last night that if the 
rules were followed in replac- 
ing Mr. Morgan, the alternate 
who would take his seat would 
be Maria Scalia, the Hudson al- 
ternate at the top of the list 
and the one who polled the 
most votes. She is a Ford sup- 
porter. 

The Reagan people are also 
banking heavily on Mr. Brui- 
nooge to win more converts in 
the more traditional Republican 
areas. Hie decision of Mr. Brui- 
nooge, an articulate young law- 


from the New Jersey delega 
tion. “I said I had no hard evi- 
dence to back that up,” Mr. 
Bruinooge said. "I said it with 
my gut feeling as an experi- 
enced politician.”- .. 

The lawyer began mailing 
letters yesterday to all of- the 
uncommitted and. Ford dele- 
gates explaining his decision 
and urging them to follow suit. 

In his letter, Mr.' Bruinooge 
also acknowledged that he was 
viewed by some organization 
Republicans as a disgruntled 
publicity seeker, a perception 
that may blunt his effectiveness 
in round! 

Mr. Reagan. 

“There have* been Ithose who 
have considered my uncommit- 
ted position as the mechanism 
for receiving attention,” Mr. 
Bruinooge wrote. "To them, I 


|miv Sdh'weiker have’ shared in 
as many state rim. three days, 
and again it was dominated by; 
their spirited defense of the 
ticket they were offering to the 
Republican National Conven- 
tion in Kansas City - starting 
Aug. 16 and the dash of politi- 
cal philosophies inherent in 
their newly formed alliance. 

“I have not retreated one iota 
from positions' upon winch I 
campaigned,” . Mr. Reagan, a 
staunch conservative, said at 
one point. “The Senator has not 
found it . necessary in doing 
what he is doing to c o mpromise 
^principle. 

Schweiker Makes Commen t '■ 
“What we are really doing 
for the first time in the history 
of the Republican Party is 
trying to bring segments of this 
party together to win an elec- 
tion instead of winning a con- 
vention— it's high time some- 
one did this.” 

“We are doing in the Republi- 
can Party essentially what the 
Democrats have been doing for 
years,” said Mr. Schweiker. 
They have united their 
"Northern and Southern Demo- 
cratic wings,” he said of the 
Democrats. 

"Why is there a double stand- 
ard?" he asked. "Why is it O.K. 
and acceptable for the Demo- 
cratic Party to- unite but some- 
how we are not allowed -to do 
that as Republicans?” 

Much of the furor over the 
ticket put together in secret by 
the two men has resulted be- 
cause of Mr. Reagan’s previous- 
ly stated .opposition .to such ar- 
rangments as “hypocritical 
and his repeated statements in 
the campaign that he wanted 


yearold daughter Amy — who - 
-seemed to enjoy the ultimate 
'xnudhete as ‘any child might . 
-—and eight employees and . 
-friends: A -few photographers 
and reporters aiso^ ventured 

in the tnighrdeep water. 

Had boOt Pond 

, Wielding lanfflng nets, tile- 
party caught a barrel rail of 
largemooth bass. sbeBcrack- 
er snnfisH, bloegflls and as- 
sorted offer fish. 

“Don’t get muddy,” Mr.' 
Carter remarked at one point 
as hip smal l, ~red -headed ' 
daughter waded- on Jwr^tsndx 
and knees in the muddy 
water, . . V 

The pond was 1 drained -on 
the advice of state conserva- 
tion officers, mostly because 
it was badly silted and be- 
cause the larger bass had al- 
most destroyed -their own 
food supply of smaller pan- 
fish. Mr. Carter' helped iris 
late father build toe pood 
'with mule-drawn draglines in 
1939. - ■ 

He pursued the fish with 
the same single-minded 
determination with which he ■ 



Jimmy Carter fishing in a pond at his este 
Ga. He and members of hLs family used sets ‘ 
as toe pond was drained to ‘control fish 




Party had “Io 
with the pubjir 
he expected tt 
= “degenerate in 
' tatorshfp” and 
cha 


pursued convention delegates 
fast ! 


spring. But Billy Carter 
caught considerably more 
fish. 

This is cheerful news for 
his many friends. Pitching 
for a- journalistic softball 
team, Billy has now lost a 
half-dozen straight games to 
his brother as the journalists 
struggled unequally against 
a younger, fitter team of Se- 
cret Service agents. 

Response to Criticism 
Ralph Nader, the consumer 
protection advocate, will ar- 
rive here tomorrow to meet 
with Jimmy Carter. Whether 
ftgr. NSder knows it or not, 
be will be asked to play soft- 
ball - in the hot Georgia 
evening. Gov. Edmund G. 
Brown Jr. of California, who 
entered the Presidential race 
late and beat Mr. Carter In 
several primaries, is to arrive 
next Thursday to confer. 

, . Before he plunger} into the 
! pond, Mr. Carter was told by 


journalists that Vice Presi- 
dent Rockefeller bad. de- 
scribed him in an interview 
with. The Washington Post as 
“ruthless” and he was asked 
if he thought he fitted that 

description. 

“No, I don’t,” said Mr. 

Carter. "I consider myself to 
be a very reticent person, _ _ 

very sensitive , about other - than anyone e 
people’s * attitudes, _ feelings arid with a 
and. sensitivities.” . . ‘Tm not deep) 
He said such charges •ceraed about i 
stemmed, in bis opinion, . 'ruthle£sness r --'t 
from the fact the Republican lose.”- - 


.<• -■■Tsssse: 


one n 
ed, saying tH 
had been a toi 
who r won ' h) 




OUR EXCLUSIVE 


CAMPAIGN B! 


M WALNUT OfT TEAK Won 
. Umitsd Supply-... 



C V b.. L 


E30 


to forge a ticket based on ide-| 
ology, rather than geography. 


No Nixons or Agnews 
On Convention Agenda 


Visit Wins Ford A Delegate 
WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 (UPI) 
—President Ford won over one 
previously uncommitted South 
Carolina delegate today during 
an Oval Office talk with the 

‘^’^r^states delegates to the Repub- 
ig up more votes forlf^r 


say that they really do not 
know or understand me, nor 
have they taken the time to at- 
tempt to know me. Those politi- 
cal figures who would ascribe 
such action to me at best repre- 
sent the old politics which I 
reject.” 


lican National Convention. 

Ray Sifley. a delegate from 
Orangeburg. S- C^ told report- 
ers after the visit with Mr. Ford 
that he had “been thinkin g 
about it for a long time” and 
decided today to shift from un- 
committed status to support for 
Mr. Ford. He- said he decided 
Mr. Ford has a better chance of 
being elected than his Repub- 
lican opponent, Ronald Reagan. 


COUNTRY FUN FOR -KIDS 
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WASHINGTON. Aug. 6 
(UPI) — The Republicans ex- 
pect some 20,000 people in 
Kansas City, Mo., for their 
national convention — but ap- 
parently no Nixons and no 
Agnews. 

No members of the families 
of the former President and 
Vice President have been in- 
vited to attend the conven- 
tion that begins Aug: 16, and' 
a spokesman for the Repub- 
lican Natonal Committee, 
which handles the V.LP. in- 
vitations, say there has-been 
“no official comnuriu cation” 
with gitber family. 

It will be the first Repub-, 
lican ^National Convention 
that Richard M. Nixon has' 
missed since 1948. 



\ ?..>* imrm 

■ • 

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yer, to support Mr. Reagan re- 
r mflue 


luenced Mr. Wan- 


portedly 
ner. 

Mr. Bruinooge was the dele- 


gate most sought after on the 
delt 


uncommitted delegate list by 
both Ford and Reagan cam- 
paign aides. He may also be 
responsible for Mr. Sears’ esti- 
mate of 20 possible Reagan 
votes in New Jersey. . ! 

Mr. Bruinooge said he had 
breakfast with Mr. Reagan 
about three weeks ago and told 
the candidate that he could 
pick up as many as 20 votes 


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ader of Bar Suggests Abolition of Civil Juries 


j LESLEY OELSNER and speeches, suggested that association work with courts claims of the civil rights 

scui to Th* Ntv York Tfmts the major topic of the meeting and local bar groups to estab- movement 

ANTA. Aue 6— The nres- would the increasingly con- lish "neighborhood justice cen- The right to jury trial in civil 
f the Amencan Bar A«<C twersial set of. issues general- ters’* which could 'make avail- cases stems from the. 7th 
said todav that serious described under the catch-all able a variety of methods of Amendment of the Constitution, 
sration should be eiven P hrase of “access to the processing disputes, including which guarantees a jury trial in 
lishing. i™. trials in civil or as one panel put arbitration, mediation, referral law suits tried at common law. 

6 J 3 it today, "access to justice." to small claims courts as well Subsequent statutes and court 

• bar leader Lawrence E Abortion of the jury system as referral to courts of general decisions have expanded the 
said that the delava m cases has ^ >een jurisdiction." • right to jury trial. 

I by the additional time by * number of late Earlier today, a series of Trial lawyers generally like 

t takes to trv a case a s -a means of making the legal speakers at a panel program the option of being able to try 
a jury rather than a ^ 16111 more efficient The before the young lawyers sec- a case before a jury. Many in 
alone mieht be “too bin » theory is that, by reducing tion of the association, .recom- the general public also appear 




i ri " , ' WaicK maA a I,:- „ „ Jne leniauve oraxx ora spe- suggesiea aevisuig ways contend, nowever. mat a inai 

~S"‘ VM-, hi«in P ^ assodation study group, for people to have disputes re- before a judge will generally 

^ s . 1 ,, r J5? urt Released this afternoon, recom- solved without having to go to result in the same verdict as a 

nnufi' mended among other things a lawyer. trial before a jury. They also 

- jLa: ***-. T“ e that the bar undertake a thor- Jane- Lakes Frank, chiei say that the courts are now so 

. got under way here. 0 ugh study of the scope of the counsel and staff director of often behind in their work that 
aaily, the theme of the right to jury trial. the Senate Subcommittee on as a practical matter, a right 

8 - 'J 1011 15 the interdepend- The study group, headed by Constitutional Rights, suggest- to a jury trial is almost non- 
** American and English Griffin B. Bell, a former judge reforming the small claims existent, 
jere are rumieiwis panels cm the United States Court of courts. Bar associations, she Mr. Walsh said that as a 
-with British. jurists Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, “id. could draft model forms, trial lawyer, he personallv liked 
; ^tnespeakers. The meet- also recommended that the bar such as complaints, that lay- jury trials. But. he said, he 
S-. 1 T° ^ har’sBicen- wor j c f 0r increased use of arbi- men could use on their own in was “on the verge of being 

observance. . . ' - (ration as a means of resolving bringing a case. Representative convinced" that the delays 

. ■ ' • Mf. i Walsh’s remarks, as conflicts. Andrew Young, Democrat of caused by juries were too cost- 


w € . . . Mr. i Walsh’s remarks, as conflicts. Andrew Young, Democrat of caused by juries were too cost- 

■' ' s several other events It suggested as well that the Georgia, another of the panel- Uy. He cited a study that 

-fry v • ; • 1 • ~ = ; '• ; == ists, criticized the tendency of [showed jury trials took 40 per- 

l ’ • ' w lawyers to try to maintain the cetn longer than those handled 

IvTOll Pnnn*> */»#/* />»• Visits Status quo. jby judges. 

_ _ _ r none If OILS or V ISUS "Mv Droblem with lawyers is i He sfliri fhflt further ^hiHv 


Mate 

irBe? 


■ r \. 

: y$gtnirr.x *'v- t %u, - : 

L- ■**"«'* ' . 


IdeirofesP 

. «■* 


**•••' if • |^ v • llawyers to try to maintain the cetn longer than those handled 

- - Mail, Phone Calls or Visits ^ tta! further stlldy 

VrOi C>r SeqaetereXHarri* V 

l .ftW LX. ‘ • > l 'y. r" - f ' : ' " . concept, for the most part," he 'juries. He also said that a les- 

^ . ■ _said. “R's almost as if goingiser alternative could be con- 

By MARCIA CHAMBERS - - | to jaw school brainwashes you ]sidered— eliminating jury trials 

. Spicwi to Tbe3<m Tots Ttsm out of any real creativity.” ’ jat least in very long and very 

VNG ELES . Aug. &— -The jurors for the week has cost Mr. Young, who included i complex civil litigation. 

:red jurors in the trial more than $3,500, according to some praise of Jimmy Carter, u . ■ . ■ — “ — 777 . 

t jr f 'am and Emily Harris, the county auditor. ...the Democratic Presidential 2 Held Hostage for 4 Hours 

I A n j n Jed one week of delib- When the jurors return to nominee, in lus speech, exempt- MANCHESTER, N;K, Aug. 6 

f Ijl Hf , today, dine on hotel their rooms at about 10:30 P>L, ed some lawyers from his criti- (APJ — Gary St. Pierre, 22 years 

ft VSI IV \d watch closed-dfcuit they may read newspapers, but cism. These were mil rights old. surrendered to the police 

j-«V on a communal televf- articles relating to the trial lawyers, and some Federal today after holding two' women 

u L/A^J: but are denied the have been scissored out Their judges of the South. He said secretaries hostages at gun- 
| jjrl lenities of life. telephones, radios and televi- that Federal judges "literally point for four hours in a law 

I JLjvV'-’ can receive no mail, si on sets have been disconnect- saved our nation" with their office on the top floor of a 

speak directly by tele- ed. . "almost saintly response” to bank building. 

- their families end ==: _ . . ' - ■■ ■ = " — 

. r l . .. .. '..Knrt 

iury room within the jy 

. ^mtroom. They gave • S ▼^Vyl 

no^ requests , 


milBWfiHS- 
BUFFALO SUPPORT 


Two Labor Unions Endorse 
Her Senate Nomination 


By RONALD SMOTHERS 
Representative Bella S. Ab- 
zug, one of five candidates for 
the New York Democratic 
nomination for the United 
States Senate, was endorsed by 
two unions yesterday while 
campaigning in Buffalo, mark- 
ing what her aides described 
as her first support from labor! 
unions. 

Mrs. Abzug picked up the 
endorsement of the Western 
New York State United Auto 
Workers, which has approxi- 
mately 30.000 members, and of 
the Buffalo Joint Board of the 
Amalgamated Clothing and 
Textile Workers Union, which 
has more than 1,500 members, 
in a day that began with a 
breakfast with the labor lead- 
ers. 

Although the State A.F.L.- 
C.I.O., the major labor coalition 
in the state, has not formally 
endorsed any of the contend- 
ers for. the Democratic Senate 
nomination, most of its key 
officials are supporting either 
City Council President Paul 
O’Dwyer or- Daniel P. Moyni- 
han. former United States rep- 
resentative at' the United 
Nations. 

The endorsements came at 
the start of a day of campaign- 
ing. Mr. Abzug made walking 
tours of downtown Buffalo and 
had a luncheon with Polish- 
American community figures 
that was sponsored by Lieut 
Gov. Mary Anne Krupsak. 

The support for Mrs. Abzug 
by the labor unions was also 
significant because it came 
from the area of the Erie Coun- 
ty Democratic Party chairman, 
Joseph F. Crangie, who is 
credited with getting Mr. Moyni- 
han into the Senate race. The 
garnering of the labor support 
and the area from which it 
came appeared to be an at- 
tempt by the Manhattan-Bronx 
Representative to give greater! 
credibility to her oft-repeated 
and oft-questioned contention 
that she has "great upstate sup- 
port.” 

Meanwhile, Mr. Moymhan 
greeted pedestrians and signed 
autographs during a hurried 
walking tour along 42d Street 
from Park Avenue to Second 
Avenue. 

"My handwriting hasn't got- 
ten any better,” ne said of his 
almost-illegible scrawl, “but my 
morale is high." 

The other contenders for. the . 
Democratic nomination for the 
Senate — Ramsey Clark, Abra- 
ham Hirschfeid and Mr. 
O'Dwyer — made no public cam- 
paign appearances yesterday. 









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^Tj.’orking throu^i 5 TJVf. 
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RECYCLED BOB® 
KDMMCiGO 

Converted.B-25, Ablaze, Hits 
3 Houses. After takeoff . 


Tin Saw York Tlma/Teresa Zabala 

Julius Shiskin, head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 
before testifying Friday at Joint Economic Committee. 


Rate of Jobless Climbs Sharply 
To 7.8% of Labor Force in July 


CHICAGO, Aug. 6 (AFJt-A 
Worid War Q 5-25 bomber, 
converted for civilian use, 
caught fire today after takeoff 
and' crashed into three houses, 
killing two persons and injuring 
three others, the authorities 
said. - 

A police Official tentatively 
identified the dead as the pilot 
and an instructor. Two persons 
who lived in tftd houses were 
injured.' 

Fire .'Commissioner Robert 
juinn said . the two - engine 
plane destroyed two ot the 
houses and damaged a porch 
of the third. 

Two minutes after the air- 
plane took off from Midway 
Airport, the pilot radioed the 
control tower that 'he had to 
make an emergency landing; 
said a spokesman for the Feder- 
Aviation Admini stration in 
Des Plaines. 

All runways at Midway were 
cleared . immediately, hut the 
plane crashed a half-mile west 
of the airport, which is sur- 
rounded by residential .and light 
industrial neighborhoods on 
Chicago's Southwest Side. 

Controllers and witnesses 
said they could see smoke com- 
ing from the plane before the 
crash. 

Fireman Injured 
The injured included Sophie 
Glab, 33 years old, and Elsie 
Rabideau, 60, whose homes 
were hit. The third person in- 
jured was a Chicago Fire De- 
partment Lieutenant, Frank 


Continued From Page 1, CoL 8™ an F comparable postwar, 

_r (recovery period and added, 

year will decrease." j “Obviously, the unemployment 


1 •' 


! i 


lieved serious. 

The extent of the women’s I 
Injuries was not determined im-| 
mediately. 

The North American-built B- 
25, a light bomber, was used 
bv the United States Air Force 
in World Warn. 

The plane was owned by Air 
Chicago Freight Airlines, based 
near Midway. . An employee 
there said she had no details 
land did not know what cargo 


Leaders of organized labor rate has been affected by the 
were not so sanguine. George! exceptionally rapid growth of 
Meany, president of the Amen-- he labor force."" 
can Federation of Labor and| Mr. Shiskin' testified that 
Congress of Industrial Organi-j there were no statistical quirks 
zations. said, “The economic: in the July figures. Un employ- 
situation is gettmg worse, notiment rose under all possible 
better as the President’s ad- j means of seasonally adjusting 
i visers falsely claim." (the figures. 

' “Since the Administration is 1 Total employment rose., , mac „ atw - n _ 

• unwilling to meet the problem: strongly last month under bothi“® . . . 

of ^unemployment. then the' measures that are used — the! Timothy Kouba, 13. said he 
American people must elect a; monthly household sample sur-; w ’as pla y ing with friends In a 

: new administration committed- vey (which also determines the P ark behind an elementary 

• to putting Americans back tol number of unemployed) and! school near the airport when 

, work," he added. ! payroll reports from employers, (he saw the plane approaching. 

. L W. Abel, head of the United ' which leaves out farmers, the|The plane snapped off the top 

Steelworkers of America and of! self-employed and some other; few feet of a flagpole by the 

• the A.F.L. - C.1.0. industrial jobholders. The figure For pay- school, then struck three sin- 
’ union department, urged im - 1 roll employment rose by 220.- gle-family houses. 

' mediate passage of the Hum- 1 000 in July-even though strikes! “I told my friends to get 


phrey-Hawkins “full employ- [held the figure down some- 


I .i 
:■! 


.1 I 

i 

: ■] . 

:i 

i- 


’ menf ' bill, which sets as a tar- 
' * get reducing the adult unem- 
. ployment rate to 3 percent 
' within four years. 

| Today's report disclosed con- 
• ■ tinued moderation in wage in- 
• creases across the economy., 
..The Labor Department’s rt ad- 
:j justed hourly earnings" index 
, 1 rose six-tenths of 1 percent in 
; 'July and was up 7.3 percent 
from a year earlier. 

‘ The jobless rate among 
!• household heads, an important 
. - indicator, of “hardship" was 5.4 
percent in July, up from 4.S 
percent in May and 5.1 percent 
in June. 

Another hardship indicator, 
the number out of work for 15 
weeks or longer, also worsened 
; . a little last month. This figure 
-'has risen from a 1976 low of 
, two million in May to 2.3. mil- 
‘ lion in July. 

Recovery Called ‘Average’ 

Julius Shiskin, Commissioner 
of Labor Statistics, told the 
Congressional Joint Economic 
■ Committee today that the 
■. recovery from recession, in- 
•. eluding creation of new jobs, 
“has been about average" com- 
pared with earlier recoveries. 

But he said the growth of 
the labor force since the recov- 
r ;ery began has been "greater 


what. 

The average work week in 

July was 36.2 hours, up very 

slightly from 36.1 hours in; in the alarm for the fire.'* 
June. ■ ' 


down because it might hit the 
school. Instead, it - hit the 
houses, and- 1 saw a big ball 
of fire as it exploded I turned 





Total Unemployment 
MHions 


7,426.000 


I lllllll la 1 1 


iiimmii 


■ 1 1 1 1 1 1 R 1 1 1 
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 


ASONDJFMAMJJ 

1875 1976 


rv I 


a&rs. 



DJ OJ DJFMAMJJ 


t 

1973 


1974 


1975 


1976 


The New York Tlma/Aug. 7, 1976 


British M.P. Is Given 7 -Year Sentence 


j By JOSEPH COLLINS ing important portfolios, w- 
| spedal to The Stu York Tines .eluding Muiister Of Aviation. 

was ^^i^£rSSK5S 

•.Parliament and a minister in'"^ 0 35 a cant b £ late for Parlia- 
i former Labor Party Adminis- 


■ ration, was sentenced here to- 
iay to seven years’ imprison- 


ment in any future election. 

Mr. Stonehouse’s business 
ventures came under investiga- 


!nent for theft, forgery and 1 , b X ^ 2 rd’ s _fraud 


- raud. 

His former secretary, Sheila 

> Juckley, an accomplice in his 
lizarre plot to disappear, 

) scape debt and business 
; allure and start a new life in 
; Australia, drew a two-year 
; uspended sentence: 

■J They sat a few feet apart 
n the prisoners’ dock at the 
;>ld Bailey during the 68-day 
rial, mostly ignoring each 
; ther. They were brought back 

> rom Australia, in Jiily 1975. 

.’ A ‘Deceitful Man’ 

■ ) -Mr. Stonehouse appeared 
. onfldent for much of the trial. 

- .e dismissed his counsel at the 
eginning and conducted his 

; wn defense. As the story un-| 
Tided of his faked drowning 
: ff iMiami Beach in November 
374, he was sometimes re- 
•i liked for Iong-windedness by 
te judge. Sir Edward Eveleigh. 
;'r. Stonehouse made much of 
[& .disturbed mental state at 
ie time. 

, This afternoon he stood 
’ anched and swaying as the 
:dge called him a “persuasive, 
'xeitful and ambitious man." 
rs. Buckley was in tears and 
■.jar collapse. She was per- 
itted to sit while the sen- 
dees were passed. 

Mr. Stonehouse, 51 years old. 


squad in 1974. He had 24 ac- 
counts in 17- banks and passed 
checks involving hundreds of 
thousands of pounds. Ten de- 
tectives traveled 200,000 miles 
and produced a stack of docu- 
ments 10 feet high to put be- 
fore the court. 

It was not known whether 
Mr. Stonehouse would appeaL 
His wife, Barbara, said tonight 
she thought he would. 

The trial was held in the oak- 
paneled No. 1 court of the Old 
Bailey, where some of 
England's most notorious crimi- 
nals have stood. But never in 
modem times has a Privy 
Councillor and former Minister 
of the Crown appeared in the 
dock. 

Pled for Clemency 
In recent weeks Mr. Stone- 
house lost some of his earlier 
composure in court. Today, in 
his plea for clemency before 
sentence was passed, he said: 
“My career is in shatters 
and cannot now be recom- 
menced. My position in the 
public eye is destroyed and in- 
deed I have now precious little 
private life left to me." 

This afternoon his 46-year-old 
wife said she would divorce 
him. She did not attend the 
trial. 

The judge issued bankruptcy 


The jury, out for more than 
16 hours, found Mr. Stonehouse 
guilty of 18 charges, and inno- 
cent of one — conspiring 'to de- 
fraud creditors. He was found 
guilty of forgery of a passport 
Other charges included stealing 
checks from his own company 
and attempting to defraud in- 
surance companies by pretend- 
ing he bad drowned. 

Mrs. Buckley was found 
guilty of five charges of steal- 
ing checks from one of her 
employer’s companies but inno- 
cent cm one charge of conspir- 
ing to defraud her company’s 
creditors. 


Dog Leads Customs Agents 
To Cocaine on Banana Boat! 


as elected to tiie^ House of! orders against both defendants 


ommons in 1957. In the 
160's, he was one of the prom- 
■ ing young men in Harold Wil- 
e's Labor Government; hold- 


A detective had told the court 
that he thought that about] 
$180,000 was still hidden in j 
Swiss bank accounts. 


MIAMI, Aug. 6 (UPI) — Thirty 
United States customs officers 
were waiting with a drug- 
sniffing dog when the Colom- 
bian banana boat Cnbahama 
tied up late yesterday after a 
voyage from Turbo, Colombia. 
The dog’s nose" led the offi 

cers to a cabin occupied by 
L. Barrera, 63 years old, the 
vessel's carpenter. They sawed 
a hole in the floor and discov- 
ered 5.3 pounds of cocaine, 
which investigators said would 
sell for $1.2 million on the 
streets. Mr. Barrera was ar- 
rested and turned over to Fed- 
eral drug enforcement agents. 

A customs spokesman said 
that cocaine had been found 
several times aboard the Cuba- 
hama during the last few 
years, mostly in small quanti- 
'ties. However, exactly a year 
ago, investigators uncovered 
40.9 pounds of the illegal con- 
traband aboard- the banana 


7_ 


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THE NEW YORK TIMES. SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1976 



Leonard Bachman 


Center's Director 
isease Does Not 
a Major Threat 



UmSCHMECKJr. 

M Th* New York TUDM 

IA, Aug. 6 — ' The 
of the Federal 
H J s main center for! 
»lth investigations 
that the mysterious 
t break in Pennsylva- 
red to be subsiding 
e no apparent threat 
rith of. the nation in 


.Man 

lathe 

News 


ail of ns can breathe 
■eiief that .this is not 
Dr. David 3. Sencer, 
! the Federal Center 
i Control, at a news 
here. 

ireak in Pennsylvania 
in American Legion 
i late last month in 
ia.- About 150 legion* 
i others directly as* 
vith the convention 
and, as of today, 25 



he sudden outbreak 
was first discovered 
flu was consid- 
cause. Like flu, 
seemed- to have 
explosively, and the 
Wed high fever and 
Furthermore, Amer- 
c health experts 
worried sinceFebru- 
vidence that a new 
£ against which most 

: had no immuni ty 

broad in the popula- 
variance of the flu 
so-called swine flu. 
;et of the nationwide 
don program Current- 
rganized. 

»f Disaster Allayed 
j outbreak in Pennsyl- 
n swine flu, it would 
.zed some of the worst 1 
public health special- 
influenza might enipt 
it the nation before 
against it was avail- 
ny thousands of cases 
sands of deaths might 
a expected. 

however. Dr. Sencer 
epidemic in Pennsylva- 
!d to have peaked and 
w in the downswing, 
s been no firm evi- 
its spread beyond 
■ctly involved with the 
n, he said, and none 
ooratary studies done 
elsewhere have re- 

1 virus or any other 
tat could be linked to 
irious disease, 
mmon bacterial dis- 
Jading those spread 
3od and drink, were 
led out earlier In the 
Despite laboratory 
Te has also been no 
lan any disease-caus- 
/ere involved. 

:er said that all a s- 
the laboratory work 
continuing and that 
jf some kind cannot 
at completely. He in- 
awever, that the em- 
he Search had shifted 
xic chemicals, either 
man-made, 
other experts at the 

2 said the first tissue 
;ceived from persons] 
ji Pennsylvania were 
ictory for toxicology 


v Cases Reported 

neology tests, for 
require substantial, 
iples of autopsy 
do tests for viruses 
■ia. Furthermore, the 
focus of the search 
that studies need taj 
f brain and nervous- 
sues and on samples 
ny organs beyond 
rest of the Aspirate- 
and bloqxL 

Jhe last 48 hours, Dr. 
id, doctors from, the 
t cooperation with 
nia state and. local 
cars, have been rater- 
itieots in the hope of 
une common ex peri- 
might point, toward 
the -illness. 

utbreak apparently 
tween July 25 .and 30, 
er of -new cases de- 
ace then. Dr. Sencer 
aew cases had 1 
since Tuesday, ai- 
de have been deaths 

u ... - 

9 S. Brachman, disc- 
t center’s Bureau of 
bgy, said that m addi- 
tterviews of patients, 
surveys are being*] 
to find out whether 
ny other visitors to 
da last month ' de- 
unexplained. ilhness. 

5 of - Philadelphia 
1 families of -the le- 
^ were also bong 

anaiists hare do not 
solution to the mys- 
me tomorrow or next 
do hope their coafcin- 
■atoty tests of many 
veys of the people in- 


By MOLLY IVINS 

Dr. Leonard Bachman, the 
man directing the effort to 
identify the “mystery illness” - 
that has caused 25 death t in 
Pennsylvania, has established 
a reputation as an «nngmi 
doctor and an un- 
usual bureaucrat 
The 51-year-old 
anesthesiologist is 
a medical activist 
who has managed 
to infuriate doctors and hos- 
■ pitaL administrators with his 
Insistent demands that they 
join him in his efforts, as 
Pennsylvania Secretary of 
Health, to insure what he 
considers proper health care 
fbr all Pennsylvanians. 

He scolded doctors for not 
fighting to increase welfare 
grants so that -poor people 
could get better medical care, 
He scolded the Federal Gov- 
ernment: for the delays in. 
getting ite -swine flu immu- - 
nization program under way. 
.And he does not hesitate' to 
disagree with the man who 
appointed him, ' Gov. Milton 
J. Shapp. 

Enlivens His Department 

One time, for example,, the 
Governor suggested that chi- 
ropractors, whom he' credits 
for curing his bad back and 
migraine headaches, could be 
of some help to coal miners 
with black lung disease. Dr. 
Bachman promptly squelched 
that idea. . - 

In the 19 months since Mr. 
Shapp named him Secretary 
of Health, Dr. Bachman has. 
begun to change the Health 
Department, a normally 
sleepy bureaucracy, into a 
highly publicized, consumer- 
onented ^department. ’ He 
wants the agency to play a 
larger role in regulating hos- 
pital costs and health, insur- 
ance rates. 

. Dr. Bachman was - the 
prime drafter of the health 
care bill submitted to . the - 
Pennsylvania legislature a 
year ago, which would give 
the state the authority to set 
rates for health-care facili- 
ties. Opposed by the Hospital 
Association of Pennsylvania, 
the bill is bottled up. 

. But James Neely, president 
of the association said that, 
althou|h he had “philosophi- 
cal differences” with - Dr. • 
Bachman, he held him in high 
. regard. t 

In a licensing Dispute 

John Rineman, executive 
vice president of the Penn- 
sylvania Medical Society, 
which has found itself in op- 
position to Dr. Bachman on 
numerous issues ,- refused to 
discuss his opinion of the 
Health Secretary. “I don't 
think we're in a position to 
say*” Mr. Rineman said. “Af- 
ter all, we've got to work 
with hinr and we’re in a crisis 
situation.” • 

-One dispute involving the 
society and Dr. Bachman fo- 
cused on doctors incomes. 



MARS SOIL SEEN 
STUCKTO MAGNET 


Scientists Report It Adheres 
to Traps on Lander- 


Catholic Women Protest 
Over a Mass for Military 


A medical activist 

(Dr. Bachman, left, with Dr. William Parkin, an aide, 
at news conference ib Harrisburg, Pa., yesterday.) 


Last November, Dr. Bachman 
< called on physicians to reveal 
their incomes, saying- “the 
public that foots the bill has 
the right to know what we 
make.” When the medical so- 
ciety protested. Dr. Bachman- 
proceeded to release a coin* 
ty-by-county breakdown of 
average doctor income based 
on information from the state 
income tax bureau. There 
were no names in the report, 
but the raedicaj society said 
the study was misleading and 
constituted an invasion of 
privacy. 

Currently the Medical 
Society is involved in litiga- 
tion with the Health Depart-' 
ment and Dr. Bachman over 
the dolor's interpretation of 
the law on licensing private 
laboratories run by physi- 
cians. 

Dr. Bachman has also tan- 
gled with the legislature. He 
lobbied unsuccessfully for a 
5-cent-a-pack increase In the 
state’s 18-cent cigarette tax. 
Dr. Bachman says if he could 
have his way, cigarettes 
would cost $3-50 a pack. ■ 

Early Political Experience 

In spite of all these dis- 
putes, Dr. Bachman calls 
himself a ‘'mild-mannered 
anesthesiologist,” and said, 
“I never look at myself as 
a controversial person. The 
thing that concerns me most 
is that I make my derisions 
carefully, that they're based : 
on solid evidence. I don’t 
worry about having vested 
Interests against me. Individ- 
ual members are fine people, 
but the group always [acts] 
in their self interest ho mat- 
ter whafthe facts.” 

Leonard Bachman was born 
May 20, 1925, in Baltimore, 
the son of George and Bessie 
Cohen Bachman. A slight, be- 
spectacled man, he does not 
look like the ex-wrestling 
champion he is — South At- 
lantic AA.U.-194Z* He is a 
graduate of Franklin -and 
Marshall College in - Lancas- 


ter. Pa., and of the University 
of Maryland Medical School. 

He worked at hospitals in 
Boston, Bethesda, Md.. and 
Philadelphia ■ and held a 
professorship in anesthesi- 
ology at the University of 

Pennsylvania. 

As a child in Baltimore, he 
worked on political cam- 
paigns with his uncle, a state 
legislator, and his father, a 
ward leader. In 1964, Dr. 
Bachman, a Democrat, came 
close to winning a Congres- 
sional seat in heavily Repub- 
lican Delaware County. One 
of his supporters in that race 
was an industrialist named 
Milton Shapp. 

Dr. Bachman is married to 
the former Sarah Jaffee and 
they have four children — 
Emily, 25, a graduate student 
in architecture and city plan- 
ning at Cornell; Joseph, 23, 
a geologist; Daniel, 19, a stu- 
dent at Johns Hopkins Uni- 
versity, and Jack, 13, who is 
attending summer camp. The 
family recently moved from 
Philadelphia to Harrisburg. 

A Harrisburg newsman said, 
"Bachman doesn't come 
across as high-powered in 
style, but he’s outspoken and 
critical and quick to go to 
the press. He's gone out on 
limbs and. had them sawed 
off, but he takes his lumps 
> when he’s wrong.” 

When asked if he minded 
having a Secretary of Health 
who seemed to thrive on 
controversy, Governor Shapp 
said: 

“Oh no. We encourage it 
You’re not going to make 
progress unless you step on 
some toes. A number of my 
Cabinet members have got- 
ten into hot water. And so 
have L 

“The one thing Len has 
done that Fm most proud of 
is setting up health, delivery 
services in parts of the state 
that don’t have doctors, put- 
ting up . these community 
medical centers to provide 
medical services. He's a ter- 
rific guy.” 


By VICTOR K. McELHENY 

SprdBl LoThe Sew York Tima 

PASADENA, Calif., Aug. 6— 
As the Viking 2 spacecraft 
neared Mars today, preparing 
to go into orbit around the 
planet tomorrow at 8:10 AM., 
Eastern Daylight Time, scien- 
tists here reported confirma- 
tion ‘that particles in the Mar- 
tian sail had adhered to mag 
nets aboard the Viking I lander 
on the surface. 

Dr. Robert; B. Hargraves of 
Princeton University, head of 
the magnetic properties group, 
of Viking scientists, had been 
scanning photographs of bull's- 
eye-shaped magnetic traps sinCfe 
the Viking I landing July 20, 
searching for a clear image of 
captured magnetic material. 

The first unmistakable evi- 
dence, -a darkened dot sur- 
rounded by a dark circle, came 
in a photograph Dr. Hargraves 
showed at a news conference 
today. 

Given the light winds experi- 
enced so far at the landing 
site on Chryse Plain, Dr. Har- 
graves said, the particles must 
Have been “very light” to reach 
the trap, which was more than 
a foot above the Martian sur- 
face. 

Probably Like Hematite 

The particles probably con- 
sisted of mildly magnetic mate- 
rial similar to the iron oxide 
called hematite on earth. 

The trapping of so much 
moderately magnetic material 
on Earth, Dr. Hargraves. said, 
would be expected only in the 
smpky environment of an iron- 
processing blast furnace. 

Meanwhile, scientists of the 
Viking biology team awaited 
the results, scheduled to be 
radioed to Earth in the middle 
of the night, of several opera- 
tions aboard the Viking 1 land- 
er. These operations are expect- 
ed to ,heip determine whether 
prior readings may have been 
caused by biological or non bio- 
logical events. 

The atmospheric pressure at 
the Chryse landing site, which 
is less' than 1 percent of that 
on sea level on Earth, has been 
falling by a tiny amount on all 
but one day since the landing. 
Dr. Seymour L. Hess of Florida 
State University reported. 

He said the favored explana- 
tion tor tile tiny decline in pres- 
sure was removal of carbon 
dioxide from the thin Martian 
atmosphere as snow falling on 
the south polar icecap in the 
deepening southern winter. 

Slower Speed Sought « 


If this theory is correct. Dr. 
Hess said, the pressure drop 
should begin to level off late 
this month and stop in Septem- 
ber. 


PHILADELPHIA Aug. 6 (AP)— 
Symbolizing their dismay at a 
military mass here at the Inter- 
national Eucharistic Congress, 
8,000 women stood silent in 
penetential prayer today for 
victims of war and the military 
system. 

The women’s silent prayer, 
which in effect brought the 
issue of an outside street pro- 
test into the congress program, 
came in a session stressing the- 
rights and role of women in 
the church and society. 

Part of the protest over the 
mass for military personnel 
stemmed from the fact that it' 
was conducted on the anniver- 
sary of the American atomic 
bombing of Hiroshima on Aug. 
6, 1945, in which thousands of 
persons died. 

“Strange words, a ‘mass for. 
the military,’ on a day of holo- 
caust.” Dorothy Day, 79 years 
old, a pacifist Roman Catholic 
social activist, told the women. 
They gave her a long, standing 
applause. 

We gave the world an in- 
strument of death of inconceiv- 
able . magnitude,” she said. 

Our whole foreign policy 
proliferates nuclear weapons, 
increasing the horror of anoth- 
er holocaust. Unless we do pen- 
ance we are lost," 

Afterward, Eileen Eagan of 
Catholic Relief Services in New 
York, who was presiding over 
the congress session, urged 
women to build a new "theolo- 
gy of peace" to replace an out- 
moded “theology of just war” 
developed by men. - 
At the close, she called 'for 



Union Picket Killed 
Outside Warehouse 
By Truck on Coast 


a period of “silent penitential 


prayer for the victims of Hiro- 
shima and Nagasaki, for all vic- 
tims or violence, for our broth- 
ers and sisters of the military, 
who often are victims of orders 
that they have to carry out or 
be executed.” The women* 
stood, heads bowed. 

Meanwhile, on the sidewalk 
in front of the. Civic Center and 
across town outside the Cathe- 
dral of SS. Peter and Paul, 
where the military mass was 
celebrated, about 100 demon- 
strators paraded in protest. 

At the military mass, cele- 
brated by Terence Cardinal 
Cooke of New York, head of 


Uniled Press Ini nrn.it Iona J 

Timothy Cardinal Man- 
ning of Los Angeles enter- 
ing Veterans Stadium in 
Philadelphia, where he led 
a eucharistic celebration 
for children yesterday. 


the church’s military ordinari- 
ate, the sermon was given by 
Humberto Cardinal Medeiros of 
Boston, who spoke of Christ’s 
love and understanding, not 
war or military service. 

The mass did include prayers 
of penance for Hiroshima, ap- 
parently added after congress 
planners were reminded of the 
date. ^ 


Special ia The Nc* York; Una 

LOS ANGELES, Aug. 6— ' 
Norman Ray Lewis, a striking 
member of (he International 
Longshoremen and Warehouse- - 
man’s Union, was struck and 
killed by a truck and trailer 
while picketing lhts^ morning 
at the Handyman of "California 
warehouse in .Tracy, 70 • miles ' 
from here, according to the • 
Tracy police. 

A union spokesman said it ! 
was the first time one of the 
union's members had been killed l 
on a picketing line since 1932. 

The victim, who .was in his 
mid-30's, left a wife and five . 
children. A police spokesman 
said that, “the subject in ques- 
tion has been booked on felony 
manslaughter.* The spokesman 
refused to identify the suspect, 
but three picketers said he was 
a Handyman employee. 

According tD Howard Hack- • 
ney, another picketer who was 1 
present, a 27-foot-long truck • 
and trailer struck Mr. Lewis. 

“Then Norman looked up at I 
the guy in the truck and backed ■ 
up one step,” he said. "Then the- 
truck started up aggfin, came up 
against him, and that’s when 
he went down and the driver » 
drove right over him.” j 

Handyman, a home supplies 
concern with retail outlets ; 
throughout California, is a sub- 
sidiary of Edison Brothers 
Stores Inc.. St. Louis. 

Twenty -three workers have 
been striking at Handyman 
since Tuesday. The union's 
Local 6 said it had been recog- 
nized as a bargaining unit for 
ithe workers by the National, 
Labor Relations Board. 

Jim Halog, one of the strik- 
ers, said that the workers were 
trying to get their first union 4 
contract and that there had 
been six negotiation meetings 
so far. 

“We are striking for higher; 
wages to keep up with the in- . 
flationary trend and for a! 
grievance procedure,” lie said. 
He also said that for the time 
being there would be no morft ; . 


pickets. 


U 


No one from Handyman was : ; 
! available for comment. 


Mystery Disease Death Toll Is Up to 25 


Continued From Bagel, CoL 7j. that /? ur emphasis definitely] Dr.’ Bachman, said that 

is shifting toward tosdns [riiemi- pQjsojjs exist that can produce 
cals and poiso ns] bu t ye are P - t|i ung damage as , delayed 

jfect days after the poison was 


rironment in winch k 
ned. will. reveal dues 
□ the outbreak and, 
prevent future trkge- 
le same kind. 


.1 Storm in Atlantic 
Aug. 6{AR}— Tropica) 
He, the seciood named 
’ the 1976 season, 
to existence today, in 
tic Ocean with winds 
s and hour. The^torm 
miles off. the . south 
vast but posed ho ira- 
chreat to land, fore- 
id. 


TRY FUN FOR KIDS. 
FRESH *;• > 


pursue a possible viral cause 
other than influenza through 
studies at the state laboratory, 
in. Philadelphia and at the 
United States Center for Dis- 
ease Control* in Atlanta. 

Dr. Backman. said that no 
new rases had developed in 
the last three days and -that 
there was no documentation 
of secondary spread - from- the 
known cases to- ; their, family 
members or people in. the com- 
munity. 

Addressing himself to the 
hundreds of . inquiries that state 
officials had received from in- 
dividuals -who were ' concerned 
about travel to - Pennsylvania 
and specifically Philadelphia, 
Dr. Bachman said: 

“We have no reason to dis- 
courage people, from coming to 
the state to enjoy whatever 
activity they, had planned. It 
is' our considered opinion that 
there is no reason at - this tirotf 
for anyone to cancel their pkms 
to enjoy a vacation or business 
trip to Pennsylvania," 

- No Virus Identified 
Dr. David Sencer, <Erector of 
the Center for Disease Control, 
speaking at a - separate news 
conference in Atlanta, said that 
no virus bad been identified in 
any of the first batch of sped- 
mens that Pennsylvania offh 
dais bad sent to his United 
States Pab&c Health. Service 
unit to the cooperative med i cal.] 
Investigation. 

Yesterday, Dr. Jay Satz, who 
directs the Pennsylvania Health 
Department's dmsitm of virol- 
ogy and . immunology, said that 
he suspected possible viral 
growth in tissue culture speci- 
mens from three patients is the 
Pennsylvania outbreak; 

Today, Dr. Sencer said that 
doctors at the_ Atlantic .center 
who had examined portions, of 
the specimens that Dr. Satz had 
sent to Atlanta had not seen 
ally, viral particles under any 
electronic microscope: _• 

Dr. Bachman said that ex- 
perts at the Wistar Institute 
in Philadelphia' had also not 
seal Viral • particles . in -Their 
electron microscopic examina 
tibn of . the sante\materiaL - 
However, these tests do not 
necessarily rule out a virus as 
the cause because it can take 
weeltsto isolate a suspect virus 
and because' a virus might yet 
be found in samples that have 
begun 'to-be tested since Mon- 
da y. . 

‘Tm not quite ready to rule 


ruling out slower 

viruses" as the possible cause: „ . _ 

of one of the most perplexing! swallowed. The poison could 
outbreaks in recent ye art. | circulate from the stomach to 

Dr. Sencer,. agreeing with Dr. -tiie lungs through the blood 
Bachman, said, “We’re not con- ‘system. 


centra ting on toxins but we'rej Michael M. Baden, deputy! 


The Viking 2 orbital entry 
maneuver planned for tomor- 
row morning will involve a 
rocket firing of more than 39 
minutes that is designed to sub- 
tract 2,460 miles an hour from 
the craft’s speed. 

Because of the distance be- 
tween Earth and Mars, confir- 
mation of entry into orbit will 
take more than 19 minutes to 
reach flight' controllers at the 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory here. 

Once in orbit, the Viking- 2 
craft, with its lander attached, 
is> to circle the planet once 


adding thein to the gamut ” ;C hief medical examiner of New 
Experts In toxicology in; Y orlc City, suggested in a tele- 
Pennsylvania and Atlanta have ! P.^ one interview that a herbi- 


begun to do screening tests to 
detect any of a wide variety 
of toxins such as pesticides, 
herbicides and fungicides that 
somehow might have contam- 
inated the {ood the legion naries 
ate, the beverages they drank 
and - the air they breathed.'"^ 

An. important hindrance, t)r. 
Sencer said, was that "we have 
not received terribly good spec- 
imens for toxicology tests until 
the last 24 hours.” 

MtirtanJ D. Rosen, deputy 
state health secretary, said 
that three teams of environ- 
mental experts had begun a 
three-day investigation of thej 
nine hotels where the legion- 
naires stayed in PhHadelphia, 
Philadelphia health officials, 
speaking at a separate newai 
conference there, said that the] 
environmental experts were fo- 
cusing on asking questions 
among other things about pos- 
sible recent renovations, break- 
downs in the air-conditioning 
system, spraying of paints and 
chemicals, changes in the waterj 
or sewage systems, washing 
compounds, linen compounds, 
use of ~ swimming pools, and 
use of liquids, refreshments 
and flowers. 

Dr. Bachman said that be- 
cause the ‘body can rid itself 
of some chemicals through the 
urine before the substances 
produce tissue damage, it might 
prove more difficult to identify 
a toxin now. The difficulty may 
prove to.be even greater be- 
cause of the time lag between 
toe current testing and toe date 
such a chemical might have 
been eaten. 


every 27 hours 24 minutes. It 


cide called paraquat was one 
such possibility. The chemical 
has been associated with Such 
damage among patients in 
Europe, India and Canada. 

The possibility of paraquat i 
poisoning could take on added’ 
significance in the present 
Pennsylvania outbreak because 
doctors have suggested in medi- 
cal journal reports that oxygen 
therapy may be harmful. 

Many legionnaire victims 
have suffered low oxygen 
■ levels In the blood as a result 
of . damage to the lining be- 
tween the air sacs in the lung. 
Some patients reportedly have 
responded- poorly to oxygen 
therapy. 


Months for ah Answer 
Philadelphia officials said 
that cadmium had not been 
detected in tests of bowls used 
to serve liquids at the hotels. 
Cadmium is one of the heavy 
metals that can poison the 
body. • 

Tt could take months before! 
we get anything definitive,”’ 
Dr. Bachman saia. But he em-> 
phasized that all efforts would 
be made to discover such a 
toxin — ifl indeed it was. the 
cause — to minimize the pos- 


ts to travel from 55 degrees 
north latitude to 55 degrees 
south latitude, and between 932 
miles above the. planet out to 
more than 22,000 miles. 

Because the orbital journey 
will take almost three hours 
longer than the 24 liotirs 37 
minutes of a Martian day, the 
Viking 2 orbiter will not follow 
the same pathway over the sur- 
face each Martian day, as the 
Viking 1 orbiter does. 

Instead the Viking 2 orbital 
pathway will “walk” around 
the planet about 40 degrees of 
longitude out of a total of 360 
each day. This will allow orbit- 
al photographs of several areas 
of Mars in preparation for a 
far northern landing scheduled 
'.for Sept. 4. 


Youth Band at City Hall 
After a Change of Plans 


Thirty-six members of the 
Summer Youth Band of Ber- 
lin, NJL, whose concert in 
Philadelphia, was canceled 
because of an oubreak of a 
mysterious flu -like illness 
.there, played instead in front 
of New Yolk’s City Hall yes- 
terday ^nd attracted a large, 
enthusiastic noon - hour 
throng. 

The boys and girls, ranging 
in jqje from 11 to 13, were 
to join - a similar group from 
' Concord and Dover, N.H., for 
concerts on Thursday and 
yesterday in Philadelphia’s 
Franklin Square as. part of 
the 41st Euchiaristic Con- 
gress. But with the disease’s 
outbreak, the 10 parent- 
chaperones were advised by" 
the New Hampshire Board of 


And the band still wanted to 
give a concert. Mr. Tully got 
in touch with Dr. George 
Seuffert, New York ‘ City’s 
music consultant and asked 
where toe concert coiud be 
given. “In front of City HaH, 
of course," Dr. Seuffert re- 
sponded. 

■ The band members arrived 
Thursday morning by bus. 
They visited the Statue of 
Liberty and the United Na- 
tions and took, a tour of the 
city. Mr. Tuily said: “They 
cried when they thought they 
were not going, but, believe 
me, they’re now having a 
ball.” 

The band assembled in 
front of City Hall shortly 
before noon for the one-hour 
concert. The members wore 
tri cornered hats and white 


Health to cancel the concert blouses with jabots and cuffs 
‘If anything happened to 'of red, white and blue. 


out. .viruses,”. Dr. Bachman sibility that it could lead to; 
Hpwyen^he -alto- said another, sunitar outbreak. -\ 


any of the,, kids, how - * could - 
we’ justify going?” said Hugh 
Tully, the 28-year-old band 
director. ' 

Mr. Tully said the children 
“cried.” so rather than disap- 
point the group a trip to New 
York City was hastily ar- 
ranged. They, had raised 
$2,500 to- go to Philadelphia. 


A crowd soon gathered 
.as they* began with “The 
Washington Post March." 
Then there was rstars and 
Stripes,” ‘The Pennsylvania 
Polka” and “School Days." 
When the concert ended, the 
band members ran for their 
bus .and a trip to the Bronx 
Zoo before heading home. 


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* „ 9*. j v 


10 


TOE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY AUGUST 7, 1916 


: - 


tAbout New York 


9 


Inscrutable Inwood 


By TQM BUCKLEY 


; Exotic rites, bestial cere- 
, monies of a sort more fre- 
quent on the other Coast, 
may be taking place at the 
j northern tip of Manhattan 

- Island. 

“I rode my bike up to 
Inwood Hill Bark, a remark- 

• able vestige of the time when 

• Manhattan was covered with 
; forests,” writes James R. 
V Roseirfteld of 10 East End 
: Avenue. “I was walking my 

- bike along the shore of 

• Spuyten Duyvil when I came 
across a pile of dead ani- 

. mals. There were three 
chickens, two ducks, several 
pigeons, fish and a baby goat, 
lying in a bed of chopped- up 
■ apples, oranges and carrots. 
1 also noticed on a rock about 
10 feet away drawings of a 
. stylized bird and human fig- 
ure. 

“It then occurred to me — 
a voodoo ceremony had been 
held, and this was confirmed 
by a couple of neighborhood 
! kids.” 

• Lieut. Joseph Cunningham, 
-investigations officer or the 

34th Precinct, said the other 
i day that from wbat he had 
, ' heard, the sacrifice, if that's 

• what it was, was more likely 
.to be the work of members 
of the Rastafarian cult ot the 

• island of Jamaica rather than 
: of votaries of Baron Samedi. 

"About 100 of them have 
been living around Academy 
Street in Inwood for a year 
.or so .' 1 he said. "I’m not say- 
!ing it’s them, but I under- 
stand they go in for things 
like that Anyhow, I’m sure 

• jt's not tbe Irish up here who 
are doing it" 


by Congress with a second 
star on his shoulder, a sword 
and ‘a completely caparison- 
ed saddle horse' to replace 
the one that was shot out 
from under him.” 

The 20Qth anniversary pf 
the victory will be celebrated 
next spring— creatively, one 
supposes, given the befit of 
many of Westport's inhabi- 
tants. 


Patricia Fox Sheinwold of 
145 West 58th Street offers 
this coda to the column on 
the Johnny Mercer Memorial 
a couple of weeks ago. She 
■ writes: 

“One pf the tunes that 
Jimmy Rowles played as a 
piano solo — the title was not 
announced — was ‘My Moth- 
er’s Love.’ It was written by 
him and Johnny for Jimmy's 
mother. • 

"Only Jimmy's close 
friends know that his be- 
loved mother had died the 
night before. Jimmy made 
the decision to stay in New 
York and go on with the pro- 
gram instead of attending the 
cremation, which took place 
the same day, because, as he 
told me. ‘It's my way of tell- 
ing them both.. Johnny and 
my mother, how much I love 
them.’ ” 


Gay Roberts Is Wed 
To Jack L. Green 

Gay Roberts Hausfater was 
married yesterday evening to 
Jack L. Green, of New York, 
a vice president and director 
in international operations 
for International Creative 
Management. 

Rabbi Albert G. Silverman 
performed the ceremony in 
the garden at the Southamp- 
ton, L. I., home of Michael 
deSantis. , 

The bride, known profes- 
sionally as Gay Roberts, is 
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Robert L. Hausfater of St. 
Louis. Her father recently re- 
tired as president of Musical 
Isle of America Inc., SL Louis 
record-distributing concern: 

• Mr. Green, who changed 
his surname, is the son of tne 
late Mr. and Mrs. Albert 
Greenberg of New York. 

His two previous marriages 
were terminated by divorce. 

The bride is an account 
executive with Seligman & 
Latz Inc., operator of beauty 
salons in 


in department stores. 


ate 


WAIT ois vrv 
SUMMER * 
FILM FESTIVAL • 


Fete McGovern of the Bicen- 
: tennial Committee of West- 
port, Conn., provides an am- 
,. plification of last month's 
column about the attempt to 
, change the name of Fort 
i.Tiyon Park, also in northern 
■ Manhattan, which memorial- 
!■ izes the .last Colonial gov- 
| ernor of New York. 
i, *Td like to point out that 
I a sorehead from nearby New 
>. Haven, back in April 1777, 
j> rallied the local fishermen, 

1 pikemen, clerks and fanners 
' hereabouts and chased Gen. 
i William (the Butcher) Tryon 
and his redcoats off our 
! Compo Beach and back into 
Long Island Sound,” Mr. Mc- 
Govern writes. "The sore- 
head was a guy named Bene- 
i diet Arnold and for his valor 
and tactical brilliance in the 
j engagement he was rewarded 


Herewith a final maca- 
ronic. from Italy, the land of 
pasta, by way of James Ku- 
gel. former poetry editor of 
Harper’s magazine and how 
a junior fellow at Harvard 
University — and the redoubt- 
able Willard R. Espy, who ex- 
plains as follows: 

“It was composed in 
Venice in 1584 by one Leone 
Modena, who later became 
a rabbi, at the age of 13. to 
express his sorrow at the 
death of his teacher. The 
verse, as quoted by Cecil 
Roth in 'The Jews in the 
Italian Renaissance,' uses 1 
alternating HcbrCw and leal- j 
ian lines. Such tricks of ) 
language are common i 
enough, but ea'-Jt Hebrew i 
line is virtually identical in i 
sound, although not in mean- j 
ing. with the Italian line it , i 
precedes." 

The translations are by Mr. 
Espy, the Hebrew, which is 
first, being based on a literal 
rendering by Mr. Kugel, and 
the Italian,_done with the as- 
sistance of Mario Pei, the lin- 
guistic savant: 


to nsw BE3 TO tvs«r 

Chi nascc, muor. Ointc, chc pass’ accrbo! 


.1 


i- i 


tf* ?k m c'b’K r.a 

Colto Wen l’uom, cosi ordina ’1 Cido 
. up nra *-,ia n vo 

A105C mori, Moscrgia car'di verbo 

r.i rava dv nn r.-ann dsp 
S anto s£a ogn’uom, con puro zelo 

* ^ uim *-,x i v ’a’ su'Q n5a 

Ch’alla meta. pa mai senza riserbo 
. . ,-et i*o j*K jn r,'.o nt 
Si jguinge, ma vedran in cangiar pelo 

wd* taty 5**5? c-a nj'co 
Sc fin’ abbiam, ch’al ciclo vero amcno . 

1 IMP 'Cri '2V R31' D'5n 

Ah! l’uomo va, sc viv* assai, se mcno. 


Lament with me for Moses. He is gone . . . 

sane; his wise words laid away ; 


My teacher xc 

His goodness, great as princes afi undone;’ 
His shade exposed to judgment, and for a.ve 
To sorrow of antonement. Mourn with, me — 
Too late, too late to pull that tooth of pain! 
Life's shadow passes hhe a ship at sea. 

I am undone. I call his name in vain. 


We live to die fa bitter thought indeed. 1 ] — 

Yet live to learn ; so Moses hath decreed. 

Tliou’rt dead, dear Muses; breath and spech are gone; 

Yet may the holy zeat still lead us on 

Til. midway reached, and never looking back. 

We riddle life's design, before the blacfe 

Has vanished from our hair. Though some die fate. 

Some soon, ait knock at last on Heaven's gate. 


With this column Mr. Buckley completes his sched- 
uled assignment writing "About New York." 


;■ jrd Reports Cyprus Talks 
iHavc Made Little Progress 


in response to a request by 
Congress for periodic reports 
on the Cyprus negotiations. 

Mr. Ford reported having j 
talked at length about the 
problem with the foreign min- 



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! WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 (AP) 

; -President Ford told Congress 

day that little progress has j faters of Greece and Turkey. 

negotiating &• The President said that tzlks 
between the two Cypriot sides 


THE BEST 
OF THE 


ss made in 
1 /pros settlement. 

! Despite United States efforts 
work with Greece and 
; urkey on the Cyprus problem, 
•r. Ford said, "we have been 

: 5 uccessful thus far in getting 
1 e parties to set aside proce- 
■ ral problems and to move on 
^ discussions of the key sub- 
!^ntive issues, such as terri- 

ty-" 

The President remarks were 


had been recessed since Febru- 
ary. Lower- level talks on hu- 
manitarian issues, also now re- 
cessed, “have produced limited 
progress on subsidiary issues, 
but left the central points of 
contention unresolved,” he said. 


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I TOE BEST Of THE FUTURE BCTC I 

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THE RETURN OF THE 
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JOSEY WALES 


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OBSESSION 

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Philip Dougherty has the in- 
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his advertising column, every 


Monday through Friday, on 


the Business/Finance Pages 
of The New York Times 


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THE NEW' YOXk TTMEV, SATVKvnz. aUGuJY 7. 1976 



11 


^ j ^dy Allen, in Making 
7 ilm, Pays for Laughs 










| Alien, a man ac- 
to getting a lot <rf 
* lave people laugh 
thought his laughs 
>■ at the Fashion In- 
'■ Technology, 
tt want any hissing 
’s ■ ’ audience. Just 
rolling laughter” 
i told a group of 
□Lb serving as ex- 
his new untitled 
he institute's audi- 


P\V ii, 


*•** 


... 



i cue, they laughed 
auded wildly for 
& half hours, stop- 
!■• when Mr. Allen 
Js hand. 

dents, mostly from 
k University, were 
I to appear in the 
^concert supposedly 
diversity of Wiscon- 
f film, reportedly 
sely -on Mr. Allen's 
stars Mr. Allen, 
*ton and Tony Rob- 
e's scheduled for re* 
r Jnited Artists early 


people that sounds like it 
was laughed in ’Wisconsin,” 
said Mr. Allen, standing on 
the eqmpment-duttered stage, 
dressed in a plaid shirt, brown 
bellbottpm trousers and con* 
struction boots. 

The crowd's laugh did not 
please the crew and it had 
to be shot over. To prepare 
the audience this time, Mr. 
Alien spoke' his only f unny 
lines of the dayr • 

Punch iin» 


Tracy Nelson Puts 
Bit of Mother Earth 
In the Bottom Line 


"J used to do this 10 years 
ago,” he said, chewing gum. 


“I never got a college turn- 
like this. Thfj ' 


VWH.ll 



~ =t; 


i- r 


Piping Secrets 

en has been trying 
I script and on-loca- 
-_ts secret, though 
‘iave been filmed 
i in a Third Avenue 
i eater. Yankee Sta- 
* st Hampton, LX, 

■ Greenwich Village. 
Land crew have two 
^ks of filming to do 
igeles before finish- 
fie needed from New 
> other day, however, 

jhs. 

1 a laugh from you 


out like this. This place was 
always half full and the 
people who arranged the 
concert always gave lame 
excuses like everyone is on 
Easter vacation or there was 
a magic show here last week 
and everyone spent their 
money on that." 

The audience broke into 
laughter and applauded as 
the cameras rolled. 

It was odd enough for a 
group of college students to 
applaud and cheer a stage 
filled with lights, cameras 
and no action. It was per- 
haps odder that not one of 
them was wearing the uni- 
form of teen-agers: blue 
jeans. 

"We were asked not to 
wear anything blue and that 
included jeans,” said Fred 
Cohen, 20 yearn old, a film 
student at N.Y.U. "I had to 
go buy a new pair of pants 
last night that cost $20. 
Coming here today really 
cost me $10, but it was 
worth it.” 


Survival is impressive, and 
Tracf Nelson, who is singing at 
the Bottom Line this weekend, 
is a survivor of more trends 
than most pop musicians will 
ever have to grapple with. Asj 
a young folk singer in Madison, 
Wis., in the mid-1 960‘s, she 
lived through protest and the 1 
first stirrings of the blues re- 
vival. As lead vocalist with the 
first edition of Mother Earth, 
she rode the seismic shock 
waves of rock music that ema- 
nated from San Francisco during 
the heyday of Haight-Ashbury. 
She sang with as much power 
as Janis Joplin, but unlike her 
better-known contemporary, she 
did not bum herself out. 

Instead, Miss Nelson moved to 
a farm outside Nashville, where 
she has become a more-or-less 
accepted member of the city’s 
progressive country-music fra- 
ternity. She is singing mostly 
contemporary country -and - 
western songs now, along with 
an occasional blues number and 
more than a little gospel- in- 
spired wailing in her older 
Mother Earth style. She stiH 
has trouble finding the right' 
kind of material — too often the 
songs she chooses are mediocre 
or inappropriate— end she still, 
tends to abuse her power by 
overusing it. 

But when she tackles a gos- 
pel-rock song. Miss Nelson is a 
compelling performer and her 
present band, which includes a 
wonderfully astringent guitarist 
from the original Mother Earth. 
Toad Andrews, matches her in- 
tensity. Robert Palmer 


Dance 


Nikolais Troupe Rolls 
Along Merrily 




! let: Nadia Potts in Giselle Debut 




mb ' 


sv Is Partner 
h' Canadians 





j CLIVE BARNES 
jne, or almost every- 
S ns to be making her 
-4^:^ « Giselle this season, 
nesday it was Mari- 
herkassky’s beautiful 
' : with American Ballet 
.On Thursday it was 
. J <tts, dancing Giselle 
j rst time ever, at the 
v’ 'tan Opera House, 
;. National Ballet of 

, She was partnered 
l .If Nureyev. When 
.: : to go, go first class. 
’ , jirah-bora Miss i Potts 
- ] r Giselle. There [were 
,«* I at least in our lime, 
s* ' ' : ways of approach- 


ing the role. The first, and 
probably the most authentic, 
is ther ethereal classic ver- 
sion typified by Alicia Mar- 
kova. The second is the mare 
realistic, perhaps more hu- 
man, rendering suggested by 
Galina Ulanova. Miss Potts 
chose the latter course. She 
did have a kind of cloudy, 
peasant radiance about her 
that did indeed suggest 
Ulanova: 


Elegance, Eloquence 
Mark Performance 


For a first performance It 
was splendid. She used the 
music with both .elegance 
and eloquence. And she acted 
with a surprising fervor. Pre- 
viously she was a dancer who 
startled one with her dramatic 
instinct — yet here she went 
for both dance and drama 
and virtually succeeded. 


Of course, she was enor- 
mously helped by the pres- 
ence of Rudolf Nureyev as 
her Albrecht He was in great 
form, acting with his usual 
calculated yet « eternally ef- 
fective charismatic image, 
and dancing with spirit He 
partnered her with a sort of 
gentle consideration. Miss 
Potts could not have had a 
more gracious debut. 

The production, by Peter 


By ANNA KISfJELGOFF 

The Nikolais Danre Theater 
continues on its genuinely 
m$ry way at the Beacon 
Theater through Aug. 15. For 
some reason the performances 
have a new vigor. The old 
works seem refreshed and the 
new ones have a sense of 
originality, rather than re- 
cycled past ideas. 

On Thursday night, the 
company presented the third 
of the three different pro- 
grams that wrH be alternated 
during the engagement. Again, 
the choreography, electronic 
sound, lighting and slide pro- 
jections in the mixed-media 
productions were all by Alwin 
Nikolais. Unlike the other two 
programs, this bill contains 
no short excerpts, but consists 
of 'Tribe," a recent two-part 
work, and "Scenario," from 
1971. 


Wright, is a charmer, and the 
‘ >Te 


whole company looks very 
good in it It is amazing how 
far the company has gone in 
the last five years. 


There is one other differ- 
ence. Both works are clearer 
about their themes than 
some other Nikolais produc- 
tions. There is, of course, the 
danger of reading some non- 
existent programmatic con- 
tent into Mr. Nikolais’s mas- 
terly* abstract visual designs. 
But one of the hallmarks of 
abstract art is precisely the 
opportunity it gives the 
viewer to bring his own emo- 
tions and reactions to the 
work of art and “determine" 
what it means to him. 

In 'Tribe” and “Scenario." 
however, Mr. Nikolais acts 
as a tour guide. It is prob- 
ably not much of a risk to 
say that ‘Tribe" depicts a 
stylized view of human evo- 
lution, from slime to civiliza- 
tion, then, where the Niko- 
lais viewpoint comes in, back 
to slime. 

"Scenario” is also con- 
cerned with the human con- 
dition. Interestingly, Thurs- 
day's audience laughed 
through the piece and this 
laughter was not misplaced. 
There can be witty signposts 
along the way to serious 
statement, and Mr. Nikolais 
does very well in this in- 
stance. The theme itself is 
both nebulous and clear. 
Step by step, one emotional 
state is juxtaposed to another. 
The moral is that maturity 
depends on coming to terms 
with one’s emotions. 



. iabaret 




■ "ional Repertory 
: reneRaic 6 



i the Greek, Israeli 
• 'ral Mediterranean 
f -at customarily pre- 
’ the Sirocco. Arts 
i eek-Israeli restau- 

■ lightcliib at 29 East 
> 'st, a different note 
} ly being struck by 
I o. Miss Raico, who 
j *s old, was born in 

.Stanleyville (when 

■ st£U the Belgian 
? “ a Congolese moth- 
i Greek father. Her 
I »k her to Greece* 
j was 8, so she has 

, ^ in a Greek atmos- 
j with an African 





> JS’V-a, 




ico is tall and slim 
thin, unusually ex- 
mgers and a voice 
lh and lilting when 
olved with the live^ 
etic Greek songs 
uut of her reperto- 
s also does an ooca- 
jn English, or 
English. On these 
^/ie reveals darker 
. in her voice that 
♦ : potential that goes 
rod her traditional 
jterials. 

[Ids a song popular- 
t ■ Shirley Bassey, 
-ever, Never,” with a 
feeling for shading 
rastr that- is only 
by ah aunpli- 
witb a. built-in 
W distorts everything 
iyed or sung, when 
ops a wistful chant 
English and Greek, 
# qualities of her 
■^ne into clear, soft 


Screen: Disney's ‘Gus’ 


Mule's Football Goals 
Aid Hopeless Team 


By RICHAXD EDER . 

The great mass of Walt 
Disney movies over the last 
dozen years are like airline 
meals. To be fair, they are 
like airline meals served on 
airlines that qtill make a 
tittle effort, providing a piece 
of fresh fruit, a tube of mus- 
tard to adorn the edible 
cardboard. 

The point is that both 
Disney movies and tray 
lunches at 20,000 feet have 
one thing in common. They 
are not experienced, at least 
by adults, for their own sake. 
Nobody, trying to pick- a 
lunch spot, flies, to London 
for the sake of the in-flight 
pressed meat or even the 
apple. Very few sane adults 
would go see even a decently 
average Disney film such as 
“Gas” unless they needed to 
build up moral leverage with 
an underage domestic pres- 
sure group. 


The Cast 

BUS, dradtd bt Vinceal M cEw*tv; 
screenplay bw Arthur AUbtrg am! Don 
Hb/jw. based on a story tty Ted K«v: 
/■'rector of photography, Frari mi- 
lios; music. Robert F. Brume:: film 
•tfftor. Robert Stafford; produced bv 
Ron Miller; a Walt Disney PnKluJhin; 
distributed by Buena Vista Distribution 
Coouany. At the Festival Theater, STtti 
Street at Fifth Avenue; Kiss Bay, 
Second Avenue and 31st Sreet; Mts 
Street Twin 2. at Lexlngtoa Avenue, 
and Loews 83d Street . Triplex, en 
Broadway. Running time: 96 minutes. 
This film Is classified G. 

Hank Coeotr Edward Asner 

Coadi Vernier Don Knotts 

Andy PBtrovk Gary Grimes 

Crantaue ". 75m Conway 

Debbie Kovk. .'.Liberty Williams 

Cel Wilson DkJr Van Paften 


The mule kicks field goals 
unerringly and the team gets 
to the Simerbowl on the 
basis of field goals. This 
makes a man who has bet 
against the team very un- 
happy and he hires two crim- 
inals to get in the way. They 
get the mole drunk and kid- 
nap first the mule handler 
and then the mule itself. It 
will destroy no potential 
spectator's sense of suspense 
to say that they fail. 


“Gus,” which opened yes- 
terday at the Kips Bay, Fes- 
tival and other theaters, is 
about a ludicrously incompe- 
tent football team. Some of 
the incompetencies, ■ such as 
a pass receiver who . looks 
the other way when the ball 
finally arrives, are pretty 
funny. Finally, the team 
owner hires a Yugoslav mule 
and its Yugoslav handler. 


As I say, this is a decentlv 
average Disney film, with a 
few funny parts and other 
parts where you would agree 
to smile if you could. "Where 
the movie tries the hardest, 
it falls the most, as in a ter- 
ribly long and trite comedy 
sequence in a supermarket 
There is a good perform- 
ance by Edward Asner as the 
sulphuric team owner and a 
veiy good one by Don Knotts 
is his shri 


This may an sound rather 
psychological for the man 
who turned down psycho- 
logical dance. But you can 
take the word from this cor- 
ner that the going is any- 
thing blit heavy. It is fun 
and tile dancers are splendid. 
They are- Gerald Otte, Su- 
zanne McDennaid. James 
Teeters, Carlo Pellegrini. 
Lisbeth Bagnold. Jude Mor- 
gan, Chris Reisner, Jessica 
Sayre, Karen Sing and Joe 
Zina. 


Events Today 


Music 


MOSTLY MOZART FESTIVAL. Aliet 

TuHv mil. Unaftn Center. B. 

NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC IN THE 
PARKS, Van CnrHanfl Pari. Bran/, 8:30. 

SCHAEFER MUSIC FESTIVAL WolIntBn 
Rink, Cantral Par*, John Sebastian, 630. 

AN EVENING OF SCENES FROM THE 
OPERA. Damned! Park. Lincoln On- 

*C0UNTRY GENTLEMEN BLUEGRASS 
Center, 4 :3ft. 

LIGHT OPERA OF MANHATTAN. Etf- 
side PUvhouse. 3M East 74th Street. 
Gilbert and 5ulHvan's. “The Pirates of 
Pentane*," 8:30. „ 

SUMMER ON THE HUDSON, SOPHIA 
STEF FAN. Lmdburs*. 635 South Broad* 
trae, Tarrvtowi, Haw Yorf;, 8:30. 

FOLK MUSIC South Stmt Seaport. 
Pier 15, 8. 

SUMMER GARDEN, ROBERT "ONE- 
MAN" JOHNSON, country. Museum of 
Modem Ant. II West 53d Street, 6. 

THE GOLDMAN BAND, Seaside Park, 
Brooklyn, 8. 

THE PAN AM 99tti STREET JETS, 
*tnH band, South Strait Staoort, pier 
IS, 7:30. 


Dance 


as his shrivelled chief coach. 


- Mhu Raico’s first 


appearance in the United 
Sates. Even in a setting that 
is scarcely designed to sup- 
port her particular personal 
characteristics, ?she is show- 


ing vocal qualities and a kind 
of musical' exoticism that 


should take her well beyond 
ethnic audiences. 

John S. Wilson 


•• 8ft* ■ 


AMERICAN BALLET THEATER, New 
York Stale Theafer, "La Bayadere," 
"Te«as Fourth." "Pas de Oki*." ”T»» 
River," J: "La Bayadere," "L* Snoctr* 
d* la Rose." "Al MldnioM," "Push 
Comes to Shove.' 1 8. 

NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA, 
MetropoMwi Oerrs House. "Monument 
lor a Dead Boy." "Lb 5vlBhld*," “Four 
fctiwuann Pieces." 2 and 8. 

NIKOLAIS DANCE THEATER, Beacon 
Theater. Broadway al 74lh Street. 
■■Tribe." "Scenario." 5; "TMinir." Duel 
Iron* "Soamiloauv," Triol* Duel from 
"Grotto." "Tensile Involvement," "Sly*," 

CLARK CENTER FE5TIVAL THEATER 
DANCE COLLECTION, City University 
Graduate Center Mall. 33 West 4 2d 
sheer. Program II, 8. 

MARGOT COLBERT, Thealor for the 
N»w-qiy. 113 Jane Street, 8. 

THOMAS HOLT DANCE ENSEMBLE 
AND GEORGE STEVENSON DANCE 
COMPANY, American Modern Danes 
Therter, IM West Itth Street, 8:30, 

CAROLYN LORD, Construction Comoanf 
Dana studio, 542 UGuenlla Place. 9. 





GOINGIOUT 







?:-T*r 



’ \ lY Every dog ha* 
-* omocrow will . mark 
s Ueanup Carnival*” a 
oor action seminar 
/ l Park at which pets 
^ srs will undergo a 
• r: how-to program 
: old {move both in- 
•<* and invigorating. 
■. their masters— and 
; is open to one and 
- . invited to a session 
■ , include profession- 
rvised animal bath- 


York's largest private animal 
shelter and adoption agency, 
and Lambert Kay Pet Prod- 
ucts initiated the splash and 
spruce-up assembly of ani- 
mals. It takes place tomorrow 
from noon. to 4 PJVL at Cen- 
tral Park’s "Dog HOI/ 1 just 
southwest erf the 79th Street 
transverse off Fifth Avenue. 
Rain date: next Sunday. 


ing, brushing, . flea 
•n and even etimina- 


•id breath. 

medium-sized and 
35 will be provided - 
, cession: dog owners 
< i bring i pet, a towel 
■* ash.. More than 300 
; -with pets turned but 
4’ xs .ago;? ’. when the -. 
ee :. - Home, New. 


RALLY ROUND The new- 
ly organized Beethoven Soci- 
ety. is. holding : its, monthly 
meeting tomorrow at 4 PM. 
in the auditorium of Inter- 
■ mediate School 29, on S4th 
.Street between Park and 
Madison Avenues, and the 
public is invited. The pro-, 
gram ■ will include a lecture 
by Karl Haas, the society's 
artistic director, oi* the re* . 
lationship of Beethoven-s miT- 


sic to the performer; a per- 
formance of the Kreutzer So- 
nata for violin by David Na- 
dien, former concertmaster of 
the New York Philharmonic, 
and the Piano Sonata No. 28 
played, by Marian Hahn, final- 
ist in this year’s Leventritt 
competition. 

~ Admission is fjree-and the 
performers wiH answer ques- 
tions from the audience. 

Who belongs to the Beeth- 
oven Society? “Beethoven 
buffs*” said Robert A. Becker, 
president “Music enthusiasts 
from all five boroughs be 
continued, “plus Connecticut, 
New Jersey and Westchester. 
We even have membership 
support from California and 
Canada. - ” Mr. Becker added 
that the 250-member group 
was three months old. 
“We’re open to anybody 
who tikes good music.” 


BREEZY BONUS of the 
city's most atmospheric 
showcases, the South Street 
Seaport Theater-on-the-Pier 
(Pier J7, off Fulton Street 


and over the East River) has 
extended the run of “A Tide 
of Voices,” Suzanne Fran- 
fieUTs “poetic collage" of 
America in 1776, through 
SepL 4. In addition, there is 
now a dinn&r-aod-show 
package. For $12.50 you can 
eat and sip in the floating 
restaurant of the Robert 
Fulton, moored next to Pier 
17, Tax, tip and wine are 
included with admission to 
the show, which starts at 
8*30 P.M. Thursdays through 
Sundays. 

The. regular show tab is 
$2J>0, and $2 on Sundry 
nighti Reservations, includ- 
ing those for the combination 
package, are at 242-3900, but 
tickets are also available at 
the pier box office and at 
the nearby South Street Sea- 
port Museum, 16 Fulton 
Street. 


j i/V:- '• • ;• v'7-' - r 


I 


Gene Shalit on NBC-TV said: 

"'Obsession' is a mystery 
that is romantic and 
weird. Cliff Robertson has 
not been better and 
Genevieve Bujold is one 
of the most gifted 
actresses around. So let 
yourself go, wave good- 
bye to reality and enjoy a 
satisfying mystery." 

Liz Smith in Cosmopolitan Magazine said: 

"Eerie and 
haunting... 
unforgettable. 
See it." 



cii - *■?* 

A GEORGE UTTO PRODUCTION 
A BRIAN DE RALMA FLM 
CUFF ROBERTSON A QBCVI^VE BUJOLD 


JO^UTHGOW/FOBCTT S. BREMSO'I/BERNARO FCRRMANN 

WJ^ZSKMOW. .. /FwX&HFIADBVBSAN^DE PALMA a PAUL SCHRADER 
GEOTO E LITTO A HARFTYN. BLUM/gflAN DE PALMA 


IT 


THE 


1 twin mot 

1.3.5. 

|58thStll3nlAM. > EL51E63 W 7,9,11 


[C Much more than a good laugh! 
Una Wertmuller reveals another 
facet of her extraordinary talents | 
by stripping the male ego naked 
with droll 9 wise, perceptive 

lampooning !** -William won. Cue Maguine 



FUNNIEST 
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; NO PASSES ACCEPTED DURING THIS ENGAGEMENT. 







Starring Nino Manfradl and Luclana Paluzzi -Directed by Lina Wertmuller 
iPGte * English Subtidi 

( 3 LOEWS TOWER EAST 


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72nd St 4 Ave. ■ 879-D13 


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For Sports Today, see page 1 7. } 

HOWABD THOMPSON 


KUSfTHE OLD TIUE-ALLTIUE HILARITY QF 
THE 3 SIOOGES 4 WOOOVWOOO PECKfflalTNEAJRfiS/ 


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2nd WEEK AT A THEATRE HEAR YRU 


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THE r rTTr v-PX TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1976 » 



~ — — . , . 

Notes on People Senate, by a Vote of 49 to 22, ; Extends Tax Cuts and Reduces the Levy on I 

First Woman to Join Page 1, CoL “* 5952 I l by* 

_ . >* j losers and the revenue- gamers, Uonby 1981. ■ sSTfrrinv for the last invested Into aspects of the sored passage ol 

r P n \A7 1 Q nr\ flQIfl Ofllivt 021,1181 galns - on snund nBtted y *£ .J5? B taxS-a $1 tSSion^oss five years toSiigthen. it business related toe^xrts—a ^onsonrf^by ■». 

1 V )JJ VV luvt/i/ull/ W ill L that additional tax incentives crease of o^SlOOmillionin m whrih Thevereion passed by the gain if S84 million in 1977 and Bayti, Democn : 

^ ms fWn _ , _ are needed to keep people ’in- to® n ^?L y®ar. which ggj^g wealds tluHist of terns 1435-naiDion- by J98L ■ ' : ■•*' •' keeping the law 

Shirley Schlanger A bra- said. 'They’re something you vestbg m new expanded starts Oct. 1 • most of the ^viao^ to uw ^ ^ -Withholding of taxes on who make undf , 

hamson, who was graduated would take home and put on businesses that will be ‘Era- USTTtt? “* ** “““ by !te !»,<&* M^somel ' several other] 

from Hunter High School and the wall. tial to a growing economy. m :?^ a SLi2 t ^ nf si 00 ner student mum tax, -and makes other other , types of gambhr^ to- provision* of 1 

in 1953 from New York _ , • „ . • Anneals Inr the^heHbuse wimted for m tto figme. are A CTedit of SIM Pf ^dent - that _ vtsAuL nfi gfa Q f $124 mflhon robsened-in thf 1 

■University, was named yes- The late Mickey Cohen, ^ the Treasury for the capi- S^w^wSSSon that- would theadditional taxes to "be col- in 1977and-S75 million in JSS1. the Senate’s t o 

terday as the first woman who was a big time book- gains tax induction went^tel to .a njfrn 1» bgier edoettw that an estimated ^Denial of standard tax bene- themeas**;- 

Justice OF the Wisconsin maker and racketeer in the unbred, however, in the face hTE^JS. TOnSon to 1917 and «L3 fits, such discoun .ts and th? ■- seaatorte 

Supreme Court The appoint- lUg* left an ^estate i of 0 f the traditional iiberal argu- « ™ ^ te 1ML > ' * of A credit to! taxes ■P-dJSKj'S 


t * 


hamson, who was graduated 
from Hunter High School and 
in 1953 from New York 

• University, was named yes- 
terday as the first woman 

: Justice oF the Wisconsin 

- Supreme Court The appoint- 

- meat was announced by 
Gov, Patrick J. Lucey. 

• Mrs. Abrahamson is a 
faculty member at the Uni- 
versity of Wisconsin Law 
School, Madison, and a part- 
ner in LaFollette, Sinykin, 
Anderson & Abrahamson, the 
law firm founded by the 
late Philip F. LaFollette, 
three-term Governor of Wis- 
consin. She was bom in 
Manhattan and grew up in 

• Washington Heights. She 
graduated first in her 1956 
law class at the University 
of Indiana. Her husband, 
Seymour Abrahamson, is a 
professor of zoology and 

'genetics at the University of 
Wisconsin. They have a 12- 
year-old son. 

• 

In Los Angeles, Rosalind 
Russell was reported to be 
progressing satisfactorily yes- 
terday after surgery to re- 
place a hip joint The 64- 
year-old actress, the wife of 
Frederick Brisson, a film pro- 
ducer, has had arthritis for 
many years. 

• 

- Edwin S. Lowe of Man- 
' foattan and Quogue. JL.I., 
the millionaire toy- and- game 
executive, was not quite a 
winner yesterday in Federal 
District Court in Boston. Al- 
' though two income-tax eva- 
sion counts against him were 
, dismissed, he pleaded guilty 
to deducting the cost of a 
wedding, a sauna bath and 
maid service as business 
expenses. The prosecution 
said that Mr. Lowe had failed 
to report $22,000 in taxable 
income. Starting from the old 
games of Beano and Lotto 
in the Depression, Mr. Lowe 
developed and marketed the 
now standard Bingo cards. 
His company is now part of 
the Milton Bradley Company 
.-of Massachusetts. He is to be 
sentenced Sept. 8. 

• 

Can one expect special 
treatment in New Hampshire 
by flashing a gold-embossed 
wallet card that says the 
bearer is “a personal friend” 
of Gov. Meldrim Thomson 
and should be “given any 
courtesy you may extend’? 
The cards, bearing the state 
seal and signed by the Gov- 
ernor. were given out most 
recently at a 5100-a-person 
affair for the Republican’s 
primary campaign for re- 
election. His opponent in the 
primary, Gerard Zeiller, said 
teat the cards were “ridicu- 
lous, atrocious.” Harry 
Spanos, one of three Demo- 
cratic primary candidates, 
said that the purpose might 
be “highly unethical." 

Governor Thomson said 
yesterday, T don't want the 
cards used until after the 
election.” Peter Thomson, his 
son and campaign manager, 
said they were printed at his 
father’s expense. "They Won't 
fix a trafFic ticket — they 
get absolutely nothing," be 


tial to a 
-Appeals 


in the 



maker and racketeer in the 
1940's, left an estate of 
S3.000. He died July 29 from 
stomach cancer. His will, 
filed Thursday in Los Angeles 
left 55 percent to a longtime 
friend, Jimmy Smith, and two 
Smith children. There were 
smaller bequests for Mr. 
Cohen's two sisters. 


Senator Dan 
Democrat of H 



iTb Cfln revenue-losing amendments, the j^uding a tax credit for those “ J 5^ milHorr^ch 7eaF 

««*** s' SST2J r&Ms, S wSS S* - ■ • - 


smaller bequests for Mr. “Tj" L 3 ~~; .T to witn xne nscai year wio, me ^ those who install wirmmms ^ rxstek. nav for oer- 

^0 *««■ SS SffWi ». pm 2fS^essVTSt te ££*&? % vision st ricter,! so ns who eari . .$20,000 a year I 

ri, t t .tJ-Tt p k mmy Senators that its in- Tre ^uL in 1978. the loss “Sj bvl^l ^ arguing that even the House or moie-*gain tojuillify tbtf 

Frank Edward Ray Jr, the elusion in the biU would lead $900 mBlion, in 1979, the nresent version contained many loop- bon m 1977 and 3390 roOGon 

55-year-old bus dri ver who ^ Senators to vote’ to faU STbfflkSin 1980 $2.3 bfl- JEZS ^ ShSkT STa holes, but most ofJ^changM by 1981. - ... triUMf.’i 


M-yca 1-uiu uua uiivei wuu many senators 10 vote ui *9 o_«ilion- in 1980. $2.3 Dll- ; n , n a noies, out musi w uk uuufia 

became a hometown hero for the~ entire measure, on the __ j ?n iqot *9 e billion. c hfld-cwe deducoon m _____ were voted by the Senate 
leadin? tn safer? the children +>.«♦■ if nraioht. ^ on arL - ™ n ’ ' . _ credit that can be used even Im-isfa minimum tax ieS! 


Labor Got Change 


save fcaxV.tjy.' 
taintypeSof ^ 


aasr-B 

%£? hSiors^terdS ? At effeefeof the ^ co^uation_of| mal i on 1ossJr 1977 and $483 inchSc m ^° r . I * Ve ^ jit contsiofid .. * . , . ! iii #oaa 


the Sacramento convention advocates came toe 19TO tax i^ucti^^re^ m ^ oa iggi. “fSjwwiaion that will deny a. 

of the California School Em- within four votes yesterday of enue Io SJ2 «J Liberalization and sunphfi- mos tpersons any deduction for of 

ployees Association, Gov. persuading the Senate to kill ioto $13 9 faU* of toe retirement income ^ of part of their resi- = 

Edanmd G. Brawn Jr. pre- the whole bill, except for toe *16.4 billion m l»«, * Pu which « used, by dence for business purposes, 

sentoi Mr. Ray with its gift sections continuing the tax cuts. Jo® “ s wmrin in 1981 P«sons who have little or no ^ home is the tax- 

of $300 . and a citation for senator Russell B. Long of ^ btoiw m 1981. security _ a SI01 miUion ^ prindp ai place of busi- 

outstanding community seiv- Louisiana, who is chairman of loss ‘ m 1977 and 5280 1111111011 ness, and a rSated provision 

ice, “particularly to 26 the Senate • Finance Commit- toe 1975 t^ cuts, except gl _ that would denv deductions for 


include: } IC 

lAprovision that will deny ia_ 


n dnal but complete repeal by $200 lulUipf 
e non taxab le status of side mg . to pretimic 


LAST.2 PERFS! Today ai 






outstanding community serv- Louisiana, who is chairman ol 
ice, . “particularly to 26 the Senate * Finance Commit 
precious Chowchilla school- tee and the floor manager foi 
children." fha hill. was nlainlv aman! 


Uti. I.UU, . 1 qoi 

uic ocmib ruiauw w ' uul “ 1 ' f t,_ cm rredit. w hic h it »* mo*. iui« wouio ncujr uwuvuuus 

tee and the floor manager for ♦fr > d extends Revenue Gamer the maintenance of a vacation 

the bill, was plainly among ,~L Th. end of 1977. The bieeest revenue gainer home that is sometimes rented 

those who feared the con- “S 1 / JiSSlfi that tax- r^^irv is the cEsmee to others but largely used by 


th q t would deny deductions for 


Diamonds and emeralds sequences of adding the capital nav $5 oer person ; n the mini mm™ tax, the provi- the owners themselves—* gain 
valued at S24.00Q. which gains provision to the bill. He ^ 23^^1976 ^and I ?977 e tfaan °on oTthe tax to that was of S184 million id 1977: and 
Karen Boyd Mellon reported signaled to the Senate that he 1?^,^ l975if thev have ?imed atmakinn sure that no $297 million by 1981. 
stolen ftmn her Pittsburgh did not want to make a fight ^ ein S ^aS^deduo- S3^i?ometelvidua] could ^Stricter rules controlling the 
home last February, turned for keeping the proposal in tee same mcom enmnletelv escape Federal in- use of Domesuc International 

.up yesterday in her safe- the bill by leaving the floor no £r- *177 billion come tax Sales Corporations taxation, 

deposit box in a Pittsburgh manager’s seat and turning The estimated rnmem come tax. 

bank. Mrs. Mellon's lawyer over management of the debate jjyenue loss f more 

told the police that she had to one of the committee’s rank- fiPii «« 7nn- 1 : • : — 1 


told the police that she had to one of the committee’s rank- cai yeax “ ♦Vf . t con _ 

been in a Connecticut hospi- ihg Republicans. Clifford P- t ^i?tLl^v ^Sss when it 

tal last year when the jew- Hansen of Wyoming. .SJSS5 It for the 

elry was placed in the box Although the bill bears the 

“without her knowledge.” He official title of Tax Reform Act '“ c ~ y 

said that an insurance claim of 3976, there has been con- The fact toat mere wetx 


2)0 . JU uiai £XU IUJUIOULC Liauil iOfV, UiCiC iuu ucui a-tyai- _ - 

has been dropped. tlnuous debate over the ex- enough revTOUC-raisin^ roform^ 

When she reported the tent to which it contains much in toe bill to meet tne revmiue 
jewelry stolen Mrs. Mellon, tax reform, as the term is com- target set by toebudget reso- 
former wife of Seward Pros- monly understood by the jutlon was a subject ot con tinu- 
ser Mellon, an heir to the public. The term has generally ing debate in the weeKs tna«. 
Mellon fortune, was contest- been used to mean changes the Senate has considers tne 
ing the custody of her two in the new tax law that would bill. 

young daughters with her increase the taxes paid by high- Senator Muskie repeatedly 
former husband. In March, Income individuals and busi- objected to certain proposals 
the children. Catherine and nesses. because they would reduce 

Constance, were taken from Senator Long made available revenues, not raise them, but 
their bodyguard in Brooklyn a list of the sections of the he was not able to prevail very 
Heights. They returned with bill that would increase the often. He voted against final 
their father to Pittsburgh. Treasury's tax collections, passage of the bill because it 
# 1 contending that anv tax law violated the budget targets. 

Bulent EcevIL the Turkish i c . han 5? .. in ? rease5 >xes Senator Long. who_ through- 


their father to Pittsburgh. 


j LAST WEEKS! 

1 TODAY of 2 & 8, SUM. 3 

“PAL JOEY’ HAPPENS TO BE ONE OF 
MY FAVORITE MUSICALS! A MAGICAL 
SCORE. JOAN COPELAND IS A 

KNOCKOUT! SUPER!" -Clive Barnes. Times 


BALLET ^ 
THEATRE 


Today at 2:00: LA BAYADERE— T chexkassky, Nagy;' 77 
W right. Nesbitt. Nabat; THE RIVER — Orr. wan Hamel, 
Carter. Tonight at 8:00: LA BAYADERE — Tcfterkassk) ‘ 
DEUX— To be announced; AT MIDNIGHT — wan Hametjjt* 
Programs and casting subject to change 


: LAST 4 PERFS! TODAY i;SS TO) 


mlf 


- r - 

a: 


TODAY: Monument For A Dead Boy. taS 
T08TW: Steeping 


a tee IUI 

plate, fmff.; 



Bulent Ecevit, the Turkish 


opposition leader and former ^ ould be called a “^torm" out the 25 days of debate onj 

Prime Minister, returned to ,te ™’ .. - , . . ... thm the bill defended his commit-j 

a hero's welcome yesterday. J?® 1 LSS tec ’ s n&ht *** toe Senate s 
Istanbul sources said that “}*** P| f cl ^ p right to approve any tax legis-, 

his flagging popularitv had ' l 5^ c s % lation " lt chose ’ regar ? e ! S *i° f 

been rerived by an attempt JgjL n !& toe budget targets, asked the 

on his life in his New York k' UlC0 ’ n toe next Tiscal year Senate to pass a sense-of-the- 

visit, when a Greek-Ameri- ? nd 53 3 ' b on f,ve y ears Senate resolution mstructmg 

can pulled a gun when Mr. he Il£®- *>,„ toe conference committee to 

Ecevit appeared at the Wal- B e |,SES It? toe total revenue loss 
doif-Astona Hotel. Three J 51 ?: *5?^ |J® from the bill to the budget 

camels were slaughtered fjj* resolution figure of $15.3 bil- 

ney the ^ ort r agife to d’«- SeMtc lca!ptt<i 

fice^etatog "iTe^SS: StowTe?” 2 ^ bigg^t revenue-losers 

The latest 'available official for the Treasury include the 
sons greeted Mr. Ecevit in tally which was oreDared by following: 
jfi the Joint Committee onfotemal ^Senator Long’s provision in 

tion since he ordered Turkish Revenue Taxation and which toe biU, an extra tax incentive 
troops to Cyprus in July did not contain reve nue esti- for employers to set up stock- 
19 /4. He resigned later that mates f or some of today’s ownership plans for their em- 
year- amendments to the bill, showed ployees. The revenue loss is 

• that all of the various "reform’' estimated at $523 million in the 


1 5a 1 CRCLE N ™ E SQUARE 
L ^ SflTH ST WEST g BMADWKY 

Chora* rick on all major cradit cards 
CIRCLE CHARGE: 581-0720 


Betty Ford will arrive here 
Tuesday for the second-night 
ey City Center Dance Thea- 
ter’s two-week tribute to 
Duke Ellington's. Mrs. Ford 
will attend with Ruth Elling- 
ton, sister of the late com- 
poser. 

LAURIE JOHNSTON 


Roll-Call in Senate on the Tax Bill bm^wtSi 


p -I Today 2 & 8, Sun. 3— Seats How! n 

“ABSOLUTELY ENCHANTING MUSICAL!” 

-€6va Basn, KY.TfaMS 


k A MUSICAL COMEDY 

TICKETS IY 7HCNfc2<4-5%?Qor8a to your 
MmivOvrrttotkArm/ha.bip./lXnmt 

!E <5tll St W. «f B’way. ■24S-59C9 mm» . 


9fS 


T rar V w ^ L imp w — 

■ Tick* Is also at Bloanlncdale's and Tlckatron (For Out! 
H To ebarze your tickets by phone, CENTERCHMt 

V^SHROPOUIAN OPERA HODSE-Ti 

— TODAY 2:30 &8:0C 

“WHAT A WONDERFUL EVENING OF 




0 







WASHINGTON. Aug. 6 fUPI)— Following is the roll- 
call vote by which the Senate approved today the tax bill 
for fiscal year 197 7. 


THE LITTLE THEATRE • 240 WEST 44th SI 

(SwASC a lor dolv&J ■ 


FOR THE Bill— 4P 
Democrat*— 27 


Means , Militant Indian Leader , 
Cleared in South Dakota Killing 


RAPID CITY, S. D., Aug. 6 
CAP)-— Russell C. Means, the 
American Indian Movement 
leader, was acquitted by a 
jury today of a charge of mur- 
der in a 1975 barroom killing. 
-.The verdict came after 20 
hours of jury deliberation and 
a three-day trial. 

The charge was the most se- 
rious Mr. Means has faced in 
four years of legal battles since 
he gained national attention as 
a key participant in the 1973 
Indian occupation of the 
Wounded Knee reservation in 
South Dakota. 

He was accused of aiding 
and abetting in the March 1975 
shooting of Martin Montileaux 
in a Scenic, S. D., bar. Richard 
Marshall was earlier convicted 
of murder and was sentenced 
to life In prison. # 

Earlier in the day, the jury! 



Allen (Ala. I Magnus 

Bavh llndj McCJell 

Bflnisen (Jen ) McGee 

Burdick (N.D.) Mclntvi 

Brrd (Va.) Nunn 

Cranston (Calif.l Pastor, 

Eastland (Mss.) Pell (R 

Ford IKv.) Prerml 

Hathaway (Maine) . Random 
HudDleslon (Kv.l Rlh^cot 

Humphrey (Minn.) Spartan 

Inouye (Hawaii) Slone 

Jackson (Wash.) William 

Long (La.) 

Rem*! tea ns— 22 


Magnuson (Wash.) 
McClellan (Ark.) 
McGee (Wyo. 1 
McIntyre (N.H.) 
Nunn (Ga.) 

Pastore iR.I.) 

Pell (R.l.) 

Pro* ml re (Wls.l 
Randal oh (W. Va. 
Rlbicoff (Conn ) 
Spartanan (Ala.) 
Stone (Fla.) 
Williams (N.J.) 




■■ 


Beall iMd.) 
Belfmon (Okla.) 
Brock (Tenn.) 
Brooke (Mass.) 
Case (NJ.) 
Curtis (Neb.) 
Dale (Kan.) 
□omenici (N.M.) 
Fannin (Artz.) 
Hansen (Wyo.) 
Hatfield (Ore.) 


Helms (MX.) 

J evils (N.Y.) 
Laratt (New.) 
Mathias (Md.) 
McClure (Idaho) 
Pedcwood (Ore) 
Polh rOal.) 

Scott (Pa.) 
Thurmond CS.C.T 
Tower (Tex.) 


AGAINST TNE BILL— 22 
Democrats— 17 

Ahourork (S O.) Haskell (Coin.) 

Bumpers I Ark. I Hoi I In vs (S.C.) 

Chiles (Fla.) Kennedy (Mass.) 

Church (Idaho) Leahy (Vt.) 

Clark (Iowa) - Metcalf [Mont ) 

Culver (Iowa) Muskie (Maine) 

Durkin (N.H.) Nelson (Wis.l 

Glenn (Ohio) Stevenson (III.) 

Hart (Colo. I 

- Republicans— S 

Bartlett (Okia.i Tall (Ohio) 

Buckley (N.Y.) Welcker (Conn.) 

Gam (Utah) 

Paired tor— Slennis. D-Mhv.; Montoya. R- 
N.M.; and Taimadge, DOa. _ _ 

Paired against— Morgan, R-N.C.j Bvrd, 0- 
W. Va.; and Mansfield, D-Motrt, 

Absent and not vollng — Bakvr. R-Tenn.: 
Bidsn. 0-Del.: Cannon, D-Nev.: Eagleton. 
Mo.r Fong, R-HawaJi; Goldwator, R-AH y 
Gravel. DAIaska; Griffin, R-Midt.: Mart. 
O-Micti.; Hartfcs, D-Ind.i Hruska. R-Neb.; 
Johns! on, D-La.; McGovern. O-S.D.; Mondale. 
D-MJnn.; Moss. D-Utah; Pearson, R-Wbn ; 
Persev, R lil.r Schwe.ker, R-Pa.; StaHord, 
R-Vt.; Stevens. D-Alaska; Syminglon. OMo.; 
Tunnev. D-Cal<f.; and Young, R-N.D. 



j BROA0WAY 

PULITZER PRIZE FOR DRAMA W4 
WINNER OF 9 TONY AWARDS 

A ESPECIALLY BEST MUSICAL 197* 
N« York Shili^un Fodnl^nmu 
CHORUS LINE 


"SOCKO! LIVELY! A SHAKE-YOU-UP EN- LAST 3 TIMES! final at 3 

TERTAINMENT!"— RonA. A’nrvbwue Xm** -SHOULD 8E SEEN IN EVERY STATE IN 

G AMERICA!" —JmM KnU.Ntamtetk 

UYS AND DOLLS *T*_ 

America's Favorite Musical Stage Show X HE BELLE OP AMHERST 
Tuev-Ttwrs. Ev«. at I; Sun. Evgs. at 7:10; A N#w Fh.v Bwd m th> Ufa 

Mats. Sat. at l £ Son. at 3: Orch. S)3; Mezz. of Emily DICKINSON 

SIX- Bate. si). 9. 7. 5: Boxes SIX Frl. & Sat. Mats. Today at z Tonfw at 3: SIS, % l, A 

Evgs. at l: Orch. siS; Mezz. S15; Bate. S1Z Tontoht at S: SIZSL KUO, 7. L 

IB. t 4: Bootes Sis. Wed. Mats, start Aug. II LONGACRE, 48 St. West of B’way, 746-5439 


ViliYS AND DOLLS 
America's Favorite Musical Stage Show 
Tuev-Ttwrs. Evql at 8; Sun. Evgs. at 7:38; 
Mats. Sat. at 7 £ Son. at 3: Orch. SI3; Mezz. 



TODATATi * 4 TOMWAT** A 7.00 _ — ^ . .. ■ . 

-TERRIFIC FUN! AN INTOXICATING C ^ Srt 

MUSIC BREW- -Vgi<!*a»nCW CrK ? 1 C,rds WO J»7t77. 

"PURE JOYI BRIGHT AND'OtARMlNG." 

— Wilta-A iW-. NratoHu* Wwwpw H IT "LINDA HQPKINSIS TERRIFIC 

B ubbling brown sugar |V|p 

75» New Souuk HH Muvcu! fUntt BK»lt 

Tues~ WetL Thurs. Eves, at l Mats. A TREMENDOUS MUSICAL! 

Sit. it I A Suv at UK Orch. Mi Mezz. SIX II; , 

Bate. St, 7Jfri X Sal Eves, at 1 1 Sun. Eves, at 

7^0: Or duTlS; Mezz. SIX O; Bate. SH. 9. EDISON Thea w J«W.a7«»St^7S7-71M 

ANTA THEATRE, MS West SM St- 2444278 

FOR CBOVPSALKS ONLY: 7X-XU 
CEA ROI7: 233- 7! K/TJCJCFTRON: M 17190 


• pm.: ai t Orch. sll; Mezz, stt; Bate. S9, 8, 4, 5. 

515. SIX Bootes Sll. 

Jrch. 4 FOR GROUP SALES ONLY CALL: 354-107 
at. Mat. TICKETS BY PHONE ALKREWT CARDS' Cl 7-net 
SIS, JU Tickets also ai Utietron: CJ2) S4V72M 
metope BROADWAY Thn. Braadmr at SW IL Cl 77360 
WED. HATS START A UG. IB of I 

246*5990 

541-7290 w . An New Broadway Version 
•J*one I Tonif/U ml 7 A 10 PM. 

'5r f *S' jLiCT MY PEOPLE COME 
W7, ‘” MOROSCO THEATRE, tiffiW.ol BWV 
, Man-Tturs. IrflO; 2 Sms Frl. & Sat. 7 4 18 PJIL 



NEW YORK 


i l ; 


■FKEE fllTTBSOB COliCEBTS 
TOHtOTT AT 833 


pp« boulez *VANmES': A WINNER! 


Associated Press 

Russell C. Means 


Parade Grouid (2450v24«lh M 

ANDRE KOSTEIANETZ 

condudor 

TCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No. 5 
SCHUMAN New England Triptych 


returned to court for further the seventh time that Russell ROSSINI William Tell Overture 
instructions. The jury asked has been charged with a violent - WTTH FIREWORKS DISPLAY 
Judge Marshall Young to repeat crime and has been found inno- weamar &*»»*, mrrv — s, «, 7 pm. 
the definition of second-degree cent gSwimjSi^ V li ^-1003 

manslaughter. The jury entered “Russ is a very committed —— ■ ' ■ »— — 

the courtroom around 1:30 P.M. person,” said Ted Means, “and 

and resumed deliberations after that’s why these charges are 

about five minutes. brought against him — because j—O SHOWS TONIGHT- 

Mr. Means’s attorney, John they recognize him as a true at 7 JL " " 

Ackerman of Houston, Tex., leader. What we’re fighting for «i / « IV 

said after the verdict, “I’ve al- is sovereignty, and that goes 
ways had a great deal of faith against the state's economic 
in the American jury, and this system.” 
just reconfirms it." A caravan of five vehicles 

Ted Means, a brother of the drove through Rapid City honk- 
defendant, said, “It just shows ing their horns after the ver- 
this jury had a lot of guts, es- diet Mr. Means rode in one of 
pecially for this state. This is them, giving a victory salute. 


Poles Face Sugar Shortage fou r tones the legal amount on 
After Balking on Pri ce Rise the I1J b ^- 1 “^ Jpar Tryblma 

WARSAW, Aug. 6 (Reuters) L “ du ^ deplored loarfiug 

-J>tries were ureed todav to S P eculation and warned 

— ^oies were ged today to £ | iat ^ gug^ harvest la- 

stop hoarding sugar and to pre- ter this year no extra supplies 
vent waste in cafes and res- would be available. 

taurants as the country’s — 

month-long sugar shortage Senate Confirms Rogers 

worsened. WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 (AP) 

The price of sugar was to —The Senate today conriimea 
have doubled under a new Gov- the nomination of Gen. Bernard 
eminent price program an- W. Rogers to be Army chief of 
nounced In June. But the Gov- staff. He will succeed Gen. 1 
ernment backed off after large- Frederick C- Weyand. who re- 
scale worker protests and froze tires Oct. 1. The Senate also 
sugar prices at previous low confirmed Juanita Ashcroft of 
invels, at least until 1977. San Francisco as Assistant Sec- 
Now sugar is either almost retary of the Air Force for 
unobtainable or is selling ati personnel. 


P BitEmvn'fl 

PEOPLE* 

OOMB 





TICKBTSAVAIL FOR AVGUST ' 

"’CALIFORNIA SUITE' OPENED JOYOUS- 
LY AND TRIUMPHANTLY! NEIL SIMON IS WjgCTA RDS pN 


AT HtS BEST. HE TOPS HIS OWN JOKES 
LIKE A POLE-VAULTER SETTING REC- 
ORDS.” Cti vt Bor*a, N.Y. Timat 

C M, SIMON'S -j 

ALIFORNIA SUITE 


rktr 

IANRKHARDS0N CHRISTINE ANDREAS 
CEO KGS ROSE ROBERT COOTE 

M IERNHt & LOEWS'S 

Y FAIR LADY 

ffORUlS GREATEST itUSICAU 



TtekptoWrtwne: Tetedurgc 2444489 


"I LOVED DOUG HENNING AND SO WILL 
EVERY OTHER (CIO." —KnANtvmmxk 

T HE MAGIC SHOW 

••A Musical ot Great Fwi ." — UFT 
MAIL ORDERS: Dies.-TtRn. Eras. 7:38: Orch. 
SI7; a eta. in. U; Bate. S4 7. Frt. 4 Sal. Eras. 
7:38: Orch. lU. Mezz. SH. (I ; Bate HO. 9. Mate 
Wed. Sit. 4 Sun. al J: Orch. Sll; Mezz. Sll. 10; 
Bate S4 7. Please fndote a stamoaa seH- 
addrtssedcDvctaie. LM atttraate dates. 

CpRT Theatre, 138 W. 40 St. 4194392 
Tkketrou OH) S41-7298(Grauo Sales: (2)2) 757-970 


T l TODAY AT SrXAlbWPJf, 

HE RUNNER STUMBLES 

Mon.-Tliur. Eras at B paa.. Wed. 4 Sat. Mat. 

Fri - 4 E « 

Phone Res. 4 Mad Orders Accepted 

CHARGfT: Mti. CmLCwdi 339-7177 
IGROUP SALES CALL JEN: B7S-S0SS 
LITTLE THEATRE/240 W. 44th 5L/22I-M2S 


TODAYS & 7-JO; TOtCWmt* 

' 7 TONY AWARDS 1975-Bed Musical 


1 HE WIZ 

Toes, thru Thurs. Evgs. at 7:30; Wed. ft Sal. 
Mats, at 2 4 Sun. at 3: six 10, l. 4. Frt. 4 Sat. 
Evgs. at 7^0: S75.U. WL 4 X _ 

HRk etaitl-T3S0/CrompSahK4Ba.gsg7 


"A TOTALLY EX1 
WONDERFUL EVENI 
"A THRILLING AFFf 
STRENGTH AND 
HERE'S TO THE LAO 
TODAY AT HO 
Joseph P* 

►TOR COLORED 
f CONSIDERED 
* THE RAINBOW 
- ada raw sW 

ANIVTDnBHMnS^ 
Tues- Wed., Tlmri. Sc 
Sat. Mats, at 3:08 W*. 
7:30 PA4. Sun. Mlts.il 
ANSPACHER/PJ 
425 LatoyetteS 
PbrCmpSalexCmOA 


-Hialha 
ACTORS' ALU 

tYFEVER ’ 



r- 


by NOL L C 
TUES. thru SAT. EVE* 
PM. All Tickets S5. „ 
If AiR-COND. PROVTNt 
IStMacOougatSLotl 


“THIS PRODUCTION 
AND THEATRICAL!: 

K TENNESSS 

INGD0M OF J 
tRTThea7i2aw.» 
Tues. thru Sun. 


TONIGHT AT 7 4 10 PJ 

C EXUAL PERVERi 

^ DUCK VARr 
TICKET PRICES 
_ . _ . . Wed. 4 Ttsa 




. TOf66ffT7 & 18, SWt 3 & 738‘ 
‘17ft Tcarni! SSUiTJUI/H 4JUS 


Noennated far BEST PLAY of YEAR! by 
the K.Y. Drama Critka. “VANITIES^ u 
B U*r off-Broadway'* Lcnrot Rimnma ' 
fW “VAIOTIES* at Cbefiea'a Wertwto 
Tbeslre. See ABCs CHARGTT (2! 3) 
239-7177. Tmn^rt at 7 * JO; So. at 3 

TONIGHT AT 8 P.M. 

olarK eenler 


THEATRE DANCE 

COLLECTION 

Last Pert. Sun. Aug. 8 


LOUIS JOHNSON 
DANCE THEATRE 

August 13. 14.15 
TICKETS: SAO0-TDF Vouchers Accepted 
-TktMt into. 246-art a 

THE MALL/33 W. 42nd ST 


"AS CRISP AND INTENSE AS THE NIGHT 
IT OPENED." — Gottfried, F^t 

GWEN VERDON JERRY ORBACH 

C 4i Me JtaraetSnA HV 
HICAGO 


LAST WEEKS) 

, TaAnmtseatknAmfLSSmAaSftitaSS 
"GREAT EMTERTA1 ttMEMTr'—CarrK. VI 

P ) RODGERS 4 HARTTS 

AL JOEY 


Directed bT BOB FOSffi * AL JOEY 

McteFrt. Evgs. al 8: *14; SI3J0: Sll, 1ft 7, S. Tjw.-Sat. fc Mate. Wed. & Sate 2; Sun. 3 
Sat Evgs. at I: S17J8; JU; JI2, ft, ia 9. CJrde In the Sawre. 50 St. W. at Stray- 
Wed. Mats, at 2; S1U0: SKh », I, 7. Sat Cvd* Oargv SSl-ommdainm Oafsa-mo 

Mate at 2:114; J12; SN. 9. «. ^ 

atm street Thea. 226 W. 44 Ste NYC 3444271 
CHAR GIT: Mmj. Crtd. Cm nb GW 230-7177 

BEST PLAY WS ' 

N.Y. Drama Critics and Tury Avtanfc 
r ANTHONY PERKINS in 


■ndrtrvn: GW to-72WCnimp Sab* 480087 FH. A Sat 7M 4 I0*fc 

MAJESTIC 347 W. 44lhsE BTO 2444D3D 


KST AMERICA! 

• H.Y. Drama Cri 

"ABSOUTTELY A KNOCXC 
n ITM lATATtoopj 
W_ . JosohPagp 



. a new play by DA . 
_ ■ , directed bv Mi O : 
TueSat evgs at 7:30 pm : 
sun Mata «r 7:00 pm skl:. 

CHAPGTT: 2T2 - 

NEWHOUSE Thea/LIN 
isowestamstre - 


• - -.v =.?« v 



t-EL 1 


Beautiful Brownstom 
Brooktyn Bus Tours 
Weds/Sais 

"Tour inside + eut thfce 
restored houses and mors" 

10AM— 2nd Aw.*41*t 
tatoreutrtrt a Reaarvattems 
Leu Singer 

875-BOM.... 5PH-10PII 




YOU HAVEN'T SEEN "GODSPELL" 
UNTIL YOU'VE 5EEN I TON BROADWAY! 


VAODSPELL 

Prices: Tues.-Sat at l Orch. & Front Mezz. 
silJO; Rear Mezz, t)2, 10 , i wed. 4 sat. 
Mate al 2; Sul at 3: Ordt. 4 Front .Mezz. 
JR); Rev Mezz. ss. 4 i Please enclose a 
stormed, self-addressed envetoK with mall 
orders. Kindly Ha alternate dates. 
BR0A0HURST Thee., BS W. 441h St. 2474X77 
flaw Raerrattsm Aarpt ST-0472 
FOR GROUP SALKS ONLY CALL: (SW 7TSSW 


"A MUSICAL KNOCKOUT! — ProtA, NBQ 


ViREASE 

P'mmri /«rrrf Amine HR 

Tlies.-FrL 8: SI3.5ar2.90, W.M Sift L Sit. 
Evgs. I: Sll 13.9ft 11.9ft 9.9ft 6.9ft Wed. 
Mats. T. Sim 9. 7.9ft 6.9ft 4 XL Sat. Mate 2 
4 Sun. Mate 3; Sll. 9ft 9.9ft 8.91 7.9ft 5.9ft 
FOP GROUP SALES ONLY DULL 354.103? 
lUn mlm mt TtrCETROS: (20) S4I-7XK 
R0YALE Thea., 342 W. 4SBl St. 24SW0 
itex So. A Major CrtA Mt «MJW 


1975 TONY AWARDS 
Snt Attar m n Hmmcml~JOtiS CVIJ.UM 

S BUST MUSICAL DOOR 

HENANDOAH 

Tbr Itmm Shultml 
starring JOHN CU LLUM 
Mon.*Sat. Eras. I: Orch. IIS: Mezz. SUSft 
Rev Mezz. SH, 9, 7J0. 6. Wed. ft SaL Mats, 
at 7: Orch. 51 1 JO: Mezz. 4tfi; Rev Mezz. 
SLS0, 7Jft 4 Enclose O imped S«K-«d4. W- 
wtepe wttn nwll enter. List alt dares. 

Ammeam RtpmaArcrptrd 
For On, Bolrm Onf, Colfc (5/3 7W.197# 
7WnM rtoi mlTlrKETRON: C(3 541-7300 
ALVIN Thea., 250 W. Ertf, N.Y. 1QH9 7S74444 

chargit: Mat. end. cards oia o-nn 


"A DELIGHTFUL MUSICAL! “ 

— GoBfrtmi N.T. Foie 


BROADWAY 


TONIGHT. 7:30 ft 10:30; T0M*W, 3 ft | 

B oy meets boy 

A UwlOmA 

Mon, Wed^ Thurs. ft Frl.' 8:09: 

' Sat- 7:30 ft ttrSO; Sul 199 4 8^0 

ACTORS' PLAYHOUSE, 100 Seventh Ave. SO. 
PtOte Res. ACOOted: 7479657 
CHARGIT. Maj. CmL Ccmfj (ZQ 35-7/77 















It 



SPORTS 



13 


Riddick, F oster, Roberts 
Regain Pride on F irsts 


ft VI 




I;; . v: M& : .7.,jL'J ■_. . ... ■ ; s ..... - 


Associated Press 


. W «^*CHASS 

_ *■•'*5 ; t prfi: -y. iin • that sprinkled 
' ‘"^Stadium last nieht 


Stadium last right 
soothing that not 
Martin and Eari 
could become en- 
squabble over 



: - . Assoddh« Pits* 

iddick, left, of the US* finishing first In the 100-meter dash in 1 Harvey Glance finished third. Valeri Borzov, not in photograph, finished 
let Union dual track meet at College Park, McL, as teammate ! second as teammate Nikolai Kolesnikov finished last in four-man race. 


Rain Washes Out Yank-Oriole Game 


^ jos*. postponement of 
Spine with the Balti- 


-j;poost . fiery man- 
I ‘^baseball, ' and they 
on each other 
. of a.Iaeup card, 
lays ago they ranted 


at each other over a beanball 
hattie ui. Baltimore:’ 

One might have figured 
Weaver and . the Orioles 
eagerly awaited this three- 
game series, because they 
-.had. won all three gay> pq in 
■ Baltimore and another sweep 
would make e-dent m the 
Yankees* hefty division lead; 

But after toe Yankee man- 
agement, influenced by injur- 
ies to New York players' and 
the Yankees’ complains abou t 
the Brewers* behavidr .in the 
rain . in Milwaukee on Thurs- 
day, had called off the game 


following a 39-minute wait, 
W«eaver made no nasty noises 
in Martin’s direction. 

'•at don’t make no differ- 
ence," the Oriole manager 
said, taking off his baseball 
clothes. "We had a tough day. 
We got up at 7:30' this morn- 
ing in Cleveland, and the 
guys were trying to get some 
rest this afternoon. Getting 


opr that early and spending 


afternoon in bed, you 
cotrid be Joggy.*’ 

The game postponed last 
night will be played when 
the Orioles visit New York 


for what would have been a 
three-game series late in 
September. With yesterday’s 
weather forecast calling for 
the possibility of rain all 
weekend, today's game, due 
to follow an annual Old- 
Timers’ affair, and tomor- 
row's might also have to be 
made up at that time. That 
would mean doublebeaders 
on three consecutive days. 

However, not even that 
thought stirred Weaver's 
wrath. 

"There's nothing you can 
do about it," the manager . 


said. "I can’t fight God. No- 
body knows if it’s an ad- 
vantage to anybody. Who 
knows who’s going to be go- 
ing good in September? Who 
knows who’s going to be 
hurt? Who knows who you 
can bring up in September 
who might help you? Double- 
headers are tough on every- 
body.*’ 

,The Yankees have had it 
tough with injuries recently. 
Willie Randolph reinjured his 
right shoulder in the rain in 


Continued on Page 14, Column 5 


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HT, N.Y., Aug. 6 
yy AUin mastered 
■■feirwhy . course to-. 
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fm£;^*,al&er tap - 
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seeking a ;second 
itory alter earning 
+ the Pleasant Vaf- 
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’’urned in a four- 
67 despite a light 
^irst-round total of - 
"day equaled the 
.6rd at the par-71, 

• En-Joie Golf Club, 
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"and Bob Gilder in 
WO event,- which 
540,000 top prize. 
ed a 66 today and 
Each bad a total 



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■ with 14 others at 
lay, finished his 
rad with a 66 for 
Jerry McGee, who 
ob Wynn was next 
<L. 

vino, in his first 
t after having 
ht weeks of play 
: a back ailment, 
1. He went to a 73 
’ jening 69, but sur- 
' ut. The cutoff was 
32 players qualify- 
final two rounds. 
iyer, also at 142. 

. ind >.in 70, two 
iter than on open- 


Tt» Maw Yart Tteres/Jotm Sota 

Ruis vere glum and finally disappointed as game between the Orioles and Yankees was postponed until a drier night 


Dave Anderson 


Lake Placid’s Olympic Perspective 


LAKE PLACID, N.Y.—In a wooden bin on the Olympic 
Arena lawn, large chunks of snow were melting in the 
w ar m sun. 


HI, needing only- 
become the Protes- 
ters’ Association's 
jer to earn $1 mil- 
in. with’ a 70 to 
■even colleagues at 


Sports 

of 

The Times 


.ho' is 20th on the 
aey. list with $83.- 


dP8gel5, Column 1 



“It's no miracle; its real snow,” claimed the carved 
rustic sign above the bin. "Lake Placid in the 
Adirondacks.” 

It’s not snow out of the sky, it’s snow out of the ice 
shavings in the Olympic Arena where figure skaters spin 
and glide. But; it’s real enough for Tads to mate snowballs. 

• Aud it’s real enough to serve as a reminder 
that hi 1980, the XHI Winter 'Olympics will 
be based in this Adirondack Mountain 
village. Fewer than- 2,860 people live year 
round here where winter sports -are a way 
of life. The population is down about 200 
from 1932 when the HI Winter Olympics were here. That 
year the cost was $1.1 million.' The budget for 1980 has 
infla ted to $80 million, . a - pittance compared with the 
$1.5 billion - spent, by Montreal, on- the recent summer 
Olympics, but a sizable -sum for a resort" village. But there 
is no inflation tn the egos of the North Coimtry Boys, 
“ whcTareT already organizing the show. In the committee's 
oTd offices on the second floor of the Olympic Arena, the 
wooden floor creaks and the great doors need some paint. 
After -the glitter and gloss of Montreal, the creaking floor 
and the worn door somehow are the most charming and 
reassuring elements of Lake Hadd’s campaign to return 
'the' Olympics to a sensibielevet - 

./ ’They aW just .games,” Key. Bernard FeD,1he execu- 
tive director,, keeps' saying. “We want to ,kesp it all in 


“I remember when I was 10 in my first Easterns,” 
Priscilla Hill said. ”1 finished fifth but Dorothy told me, 
•Next year you’ll make it to the nationals’ and I did. She 
was always nice to me.” 

Many of the other girl figure skaters had their hair 
cut short, in the Dorothy Hamid style. Bot little Priscilla 
Hill, about to enter her sophomore year,' had long dark 
hair that fell across her pink sweater in the chili of the 
ice rink. • ... 


;; ft won’t! be easy. "Already there -is a file of 5,400 
Olympic tic i&b'^6rde& And evsy-day people phone the 
motels here*’ .. . * 

• *T3ut .we’re not taking any. -iraervatKins yet,” said 
Serge Lush, the manage of the .Holiday Inn and the 
riifltrrtum' (rf the Alpine doing events. "We won’t take any 
■until we get our bousing plans woiied. out' It’s too early 
to do that now.” 

.Skates 6 Heins a Day 

• In the distance, Whiteface Mountain, where the 
Alpine events will be held, was green in the summer sun. 
So was the StaVjunip hill and the Mount Van Hbevenberg 
bobsled run. But the Olympic Arena, where the ice 
is in use 22 hours a day, figure skaters . were -practiring. 

- “rd love to make the 1980 01ym|»c- team” Priscilla 
Hill was saying. “ThatV why I’m here working on a 


*1 like long 'hair," she said. “The short hair was nice 
for Dorothy, but that was Dorothy; I want to be me.” 

On a big plaque near the Olympic Arena’s entrance, 
the 1932 Olympic winners are listed. Soaja Henie, the Nor- 
wegian doll who went cm to Hollywood, won the figure 
skating gold medal. Jack Shea of Lake Placid, how an 
Olympic committee member, and . Irving Jaffee of New York 
each won two speed skating gold medals. 

“There were only 14 events in 1932 and there are' 
more than 30 now,” Ed Stransenbach, the- media officer, 
was saying. “And there were wily about 330 athletes in 
1932, now there are nearly 1,200.’’ . ' - 

The athletes Olympic Village is planned for Rayhrook; 
a former drug-rehabilitation center. After that, the plan is ' 
for the Federal Government to use it as a tphinnum- 
security prison. - 

“What , happened -in Montreal doesn't really concern 
us because the Summer Games are so much bigger than 
the ; Winter Games anyway” said Bob Allen, the arena 
manager. But over in Innsbruck this year the Winter Games 
were bigger than they had to be. To me, Innsbruck was 
overstaffed. The big thing is that people should build only 
what they can use after the Oljropfcs are over. 


new. pregram." 

' Priscilla Hill is 14 vears old. In the summer she skates 


here for sik hours' a day— four in the morning, another 
two at night In: between; she is tutored so that she will 
be- able to maintain her A' average at Lexington (Mass.) 


n, leading in the 
n, lining up shot 
le 18th green. 


Christian Academy despite trips to figure skating compe- 
titions. She ' is Ope of the most promising figure skaters 


in the United States and in four years, she looms as a con- 
tender for the gold medal that Dorothy Hamil] won at Inns- 
bruck last winter. '■ 


New FieWhouse Planned 

. Among the Olympic construction will be .a new field- 
house,- a 400-meter outdoor speed skating oval and a 90- 
meter ski jump. • 

“The fteldhoose will be for hockey and figure skat- 
ing” Bob Allen said. "And it will be used 10 months 
a year; just as this arena is now. it will have weight rooms, 
ballet rooms, exercise rooms, classrooms. And it will seat 
8,0Q0 for the Olympics, including 3,000 temporary seats. 
We need those seats. This arena only seats 2,000 — that 
■ was a big crowd in 1932.” 

Back in 1932 the Olympic gate receipts amounted to 
only $96,000 but the deficit was only $52,468. 

"With -our new facilities,” Bob Allen continued, “Lake 
Placid will be a winter sports training center.. The 400- 
meter speed skating oval will be only the second in the 
country and the 90-meter ski jump will be the first And 
everything will be refrigerated. We won't even need snow 
in 1980, we’U be able to make our own for every event” 
All the Federal and State funds have not been estab- 
lished yet a reminder that Denver originally was the site 
of this year’s Winter Olympics before reneging. 

'The Federal Government or the environmentalists 
may turn the 1980 Winter Games back,” Bob Allen said, 
“but Late Placid will never turn them back.” 


v-rr; 



1 


By NEEL AMDUR 

Seeciil to The Sw York Tln»* 

CO LLEG E PARK. Md., 
Aug. 6 — Steve Riddick, 
Charles Foster, and Dave 
Roberts won individual gold 
.piedals today — one week too 
late. 

Saying “I owed it to my- 
self,” the 6-foot-3-inch Rid- 
dick whipped a bloated Val- 
ery Borzov and a fatigued 
Harvey Glance in the 100- 
meter dash during the United 
States-Soviet Unton dual 
track and field meet at Byrd 
Stadium on the University Of 
Maryland campus. 

. The 24-year-oW Riddick, 
who anchored the victorious 
United States 400-meter re- 
lay team in Montreal but 
failed to qualify for the 
Olympic 100-meter final, ran 
a respectable 10.5 seconds 
today and said “I was in 
good position over the last 
20 yards, I finished strong.’’ 
Borzov, the bronze medal- 
ist in the 100 and a three- 
time winner in this series, 
was second, a stride back, at 
10.20, with Glance, the 
fourth-place finisher in Mon- 
treal, third today in 10.23. 

Nine meet records fell dur- 
ing the opening day of the 
two-day meet, including the 
fastest women’s 1.500 meters 
ever run in the United States 
(4:003, by Tatyana Kazan- 
kina, the Olympic champion) 
and the longest hammer 
throw in this country (255 
feet II inches, by Aleksei 
Spiridonov). 

There was an attempt for 
a world record in the pole 
vault at 18 feet 9 inches by 
Roberts, the current record- 
holder, who had finished 
third in Montreal. The United 
States Olympian, blessed with 
a gentle breeze at bis back 
after the runway was re- 
versed, cleared 18-%, a meet 
record, and barely missed on 


his third attempt at 18-9 be- 
fore catching the crosshair 
with his chest 

The first-day team score 
produced only' one surprise, 
aside from the relatively 
small crowd of 10,000: the 
American women, wbo gener- 
ally lose to their Soviet rivals 
anyway, could not manage a 
first or second place in any 
of the six individual events. 

Although the American men 
won seven of L0 events for a 
59-46 margin, a 53-20 lead by 
the Russian women put the 
Soviet Union in front on the 
combined team score, 99-79. 

The United States women 
appeared so outclassed and 
disoriented that the 400- 


meter relay team, beaten by 
almost 75 meters, consisted 
of two quarter-milers. a long 
jumper and a sprinter ob- 
viously out of condition. 

Riddick’s victory was one 
of the few times that Amer- 
ican men had beaten Borzov 
in this meet, and in over- 
hauling the Olympic bronze 
medalist, Willie Davenport, 
fay a stride in the high hur- 
dles, Foster also regained a 
measure of pride from bis 
disappointing showing in 
Montreal. 

“The only thing tihat both- 
ers me is that right now Tin 
classified as No. 4 ic the 


Continued on Page 15, Column 2 


Connors Extended 
In Defeating Dibbs 


By PRANAY GUPTE 

Special to The Kew Tort Tine* 

CONWAY, N.H.. able day for Connors meta- 


NORTH 
Aug. 6 — Jimmy Connors 
waved expansively this 
morning toward the acres of 
pine trees and the gentle 
slope of the White Mountains 
that frame this resort com- 
munity. 

“It’s such a pleasure to 
play in these surroundings,” 
he said, breathing in the 
tang;/ air. 

But that was before his 
match this afternoon with 
Eddie Difobs in the quarter- 
finals of the $100,000 Volvo 
International tennis tourna- 
ment 


Connors, of SsIJeyille, Dl., 
of MTS* 


defeated Dibbs of 
7-6, . in a match that lasted 
a bit more than two hours 
and went to 12-point break- 
ers in both sets. 

What started as a pleasur- 


morphized into an afternoon 
of agony and anxiety. The 
southpaw, who won this 
tournament last year, sur- 
prised by the strength of Ihe 
serves by the dimmutive 
Dibbs Connors is considered 
among the best in the game 
on return of service, but he 
netted returns at least five 
times. Dibbs served three 
aces, a rarity for him. 

And Connors seemed sur- 
prised, too, by the ferocity 
of Dibbs’s two-fisted back- 
hands. On 2 points in the 
first and the seventh games 
of the second set, Dibbs fired 
shots at such impossible 
crosscourt angles that Con- 
Tt£R was caught almost flat- 
footed on the service line. 

But no one treats Connors 


Continued on Page 14, Column 5 


Jets Choose Buttle to Start 


By GERALD ESKENAZI 

Special to Tbr New Tort Ttmn 

HEMPSTEAD, L. L, Aug. 
6 — “Is Greg Buttle my No. 
1 middle linebacker?” asked 
Wait Michaels today. “Well, 
we’re starting him against 
the Giants, aren't we?” 

In other words, yes he is. 
Michaels, the Jets’ defensive 
coordinator and linebacker 
coach, is the sort that 
doesn’t hold up a flag and 
call for attention. Especially 
if he’s talking about a rookie 
linebacker. 

Buttle was with the New 
Yorkers only 3*4 days be- 
fore homing in to play 
against the Cardinals at St. 
Louis. He started as the left 
linebacker, and immediately 
was the first man in on a 
tackle. Then he switched to 
the middle, where he saw 
action for only 10 plays. 
Now, he’s starting. 

“He's fast and he likes 
to hit. That's what I look 
for,” said Michaels. “Now 
it’s a question of repeating. 
I don’t want to mention 


• . f'. 1 ' % *?».■ 

■ < : V- .= <•*<, ?Us»{ 



Tire New York Timas 


Greg Buttle 


names, but a lot of guj/s 


missed tackles against 
Cardinals. I want us to 
tackle the Giants.” 

The Jets’ linebacker corps 
has been a problem for five' 
years, a sort of weak spot 
that keeps tearing as soon 
as pressure is applied. Two 


of the three who started last 
season, Rich Lewis and 
Jamie Rivers, have been 
dismissed. 

Lewis was not invited back, 
and Rivers didn’t pass his 
physical. The Jets were un- 
likely to keep Rivers anyway. 

Buttle is the type that 
Coach Lou Holtz searched 
for as carefully as a shopper 
sorting through a crate of 
apples for the firmest. Holtz 
did not want a complainer, 
and he didn’t want someone 
who was afraid of contact. 


The plan was for Buttle to 
play an outside spot, with 
Godwin Turk in the middle. - 
But Turk apparently was bet-, 
ter suited to the outside and' 
so the plan was changed to 
put Buttle in the middle. 
Then Turk was injured and 
Buttle went outside, with 
John Ebersole starting in the 
middle. 

Buttle has now passed the 
veteran Ebersole. Richard , 
Wood remains the right Jine- 


Continued on Page 15, Column 2 


How the English 





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14 


THE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7. 1976 


Hassler Puts End 
Tol8-GameSkein 


By DEANE McGOWEN 

“Better late than seder” in the eighth. Roberts struck 


has become Andy Hassler*® 
philosophy in the majior 
leagues. 

Hassler, 
left-hander 
City 


out three and walked none in 
evening his record at 11-11. 


the 25-year-old 
of. the Kansas 
broke a near- 
- record 18-game losing streak 
last night when he beat the 
Chicago White Sox, 9-2, in 
Comiskey Park. 

The American League rec- 
ord of 19 successive losses 
by a pitcher was set by H. 
John Nabors of the Phila- 
delphia Athletics . of 1916. 
Nabors set his mark from 
April 28 through Sept. 28. 

The major league mark is 
23, set by Clifton G. Curtis 


Baseball Roundup 


of the old Boston Braves of 
the National League. His 
dubious streak began on 
June 13, 1910 and continued 
through May 22, 1911. 

Hassler. who gave up both 
Chicago runs in his seven- 
inning stint; lost his last 11 
decisions in 1975 with the 
California Angels and lost 
six more with California 
before the Royals acquired 
him last month. This monu- 
mental triumph evend his 
Kansas City record at .1-1 
and mark in 1976. 

The Royals, held hitless 
through the first five innings 
by Chicago’s Bart Johnson 
9-10), erupted for five runs 
on seven hits in the sixth. 

Frank White led off with a 
single, went to second on a 
wild pitch and scored on a 
single by Amos Otis. Geoige 
Brett tripled to score Otis, 
then scored the go-ahead 
run on a single by John May- 
berry. ; 

Hal McRae singled to put 
Mayberry on third and he 
came across on Al Co wen's 
double. The fifth run of the 
inning came in on another 
single by Bob Stinson. 

Dave Nelson hit a homer 
with Mayberry on base in the 
ninth to conclude the Roy- 
als' scoring 

The While Sox got to 
Hassler for two runs in the 
first on singles by Bucky 
Dent, Ralph Garr and Jorge 
Orta plus an error at short- 
stop by Fred Patek. 

Mark Littell worked the 
last two innings for Has- 
sler. The White Sox left . 
nine men on base. They got 
nine hits off Hassler. 

AMERICAN LEAGUE 
Tigers 3, Indians I 
AT DETROIT— -The Tiger® 
snapped a rive-game Losmg 
streak on. the seven-hit pitch- 
mg of Dave Roberts and the 
hitting of Rusty Staub, Ron 
LeFlore and Aurelio Rod- 
riguez. Staub hit his ninth 
homer off Jackie Brown lead- 
ing off the fourth. LeFlore 
singled the second run home 
in the seventh and Rodriguez 
doubled the third run across 


NATIONAL LEAGUE 
Cubs 6, Expos 5 
‘ (13 innings) 

' AT MONTREAL — Rick 
Monday hit his 19th home 
run of the season with one 
out in the 13th inning to give 
the Cubs the victory. Mon- 
day. who drove in a run earli- 
er, in th e game, helped Paul 
Reuschel gain his third tri- 
umph in rive decisions. The 
Expos had tied the game in 
the ninth. Barry Foote was 
hit by a pitch and Ellis Val- 
entine doubled. With runners 
on first and second, Wayne 
Garrett singled in one ran, 
and Del Unser knocked the 
other across with a sacrifice 
fly. Chuck Taylor was the 
loser. 

Braves 7 , Giants 0 
AT ATLANTA— WiJlieMon- 
tanez collected a homer and 
three singles to back the 
four-blip itching of Carl Mor- 
ton. Morton, now 2-8 after 
losing his first seven deci- 
sions, did not walk d batter 
and faced four batters in only 
one inning. As he posted his 
first shutout of the campaign. 
Montanez singled home the 
first run in the first and 
bomered in the third. The 
Braves added five runs in the 
fifth, highlighted by Darrell 
Chaney’s two-run double and 
Jim Wynn’s run-scoring 
double. 



Connors 





Continued From Page 1$ 


Jimmy Connors returning forehand to Eddie Dibbs .during 
quarterfinal at North Conway, NJL,yesterday. Connors 
won match, 7-6, 7-6, and advanced to semifinal. 


Riccio to Captain 
Eli Baseball Team 


Pete Riccio, a junior third 
baseman from West Haven, 
Conn., has been elected cap- 
tain of the 1977 Yale base- 
ball team. He succeeds Robin 
Michel of Peoria, HI. 

Riccio. who set a Yale rec- 
ord for doubles in a season 
with nine, batted .255 this 
season, the third highest 
average on the team. He 
shared the G. H. Walker Jr. 
most valuable player award 
with Greg Matthews, a sec- 
ond baseman. 


Polish Woman Sets 440 Mark 

EDINBURGH, Scotland, Aug. 6 (Reuters) — A world 
record for Irena Szewinska of Poland and a defeat for John 
Walker of New Zealand highlighted an international track 
meet tonighL 

Mrs. Szewinska added the 440-yard record to the 
world marks she already owns in the 200-meter and 400- 
meter dashes. Her time of 51.71 seconds erased the 
previous record of 52.2 shared by Kathy Hammond and 
Debra Sapenter of the United States. 

, Walker, the Olympic 1,500-meter champion, defied a 
doctor's order that he not run in the 1,000 meters because 
of a heavy cold. But he ran and finished fourth to Ivo Van 
Damme of Belgium, who won in 2:17.47. 

Another Olympic champion to meet defeat was Lasse 
Viren of Finland. He finished 11th in the two-mile race, 
won by Brendan Foster of Britain in 8:22.16. Jim Bolding 
of the United States took the 400-meter hurdles in 49.72. 


this way for long, certainly 
not a fifth-seeded player 
whom he had defeated barely 
two weeks ago back m 
Washington, 6-4, 4-6. 6-4. 
Connors produced seven aces 
— a rarity for him, too, be- 
cause his save is not his 
forte. 

Still, there were many 
moments in' both sets when 
the outcome seemed in doubt 
Connors groaned, grunted, 
grimaced, but not in jest as 
he is generally wont to do. 

"My anxiety was for real," 
he said later, “But my game 
is built on confidence and 
despite the fact that -Eddie 
just stayed there and dug 
right in, I did not lose my 

confidence." 

Then Connors delivered a 
tribute to Dlbbs — any tribute 
to an opponent is also a 
rarity for Connors. “I think 
this guy is onebf the greatest 
clay-court players in the 
world," he said. 

Connors has said that clay 
courts, are not his favorite 
surface. But one seeded 
player, who usually thrives on 
them was decisively beaten 
this" evening by an unseeded 
player who does not like 
clay. . 

The loser was the second- 
seeded Manuel Orantes of 
Spain. He was upset by Cliff 
Richey of San Angelo, Tex, 
6-4, 6-3. 

Raul Ramirez of Mexico 
delighted the capacity crowd 
of 7,500 with his virtuosity 
at placing shots as he de- 
feated his friend and dou- 
bles partner, Brian Gottfried 
of Fort Lauderdale, FIsl, 6-1, 
2-6. 6-2. 

In the last quarterfinal 
match. unseeded Zetko 
Franulovk of Yugoslavia, 
who had earlier defeated Ar- 
thur Ashe, knocked out 
ninth-seeded Wojtek Flbak of 
Poland, 641, 6-4. 

And late this afternoon. 


Ashe and Connors, who were 
seeded fourth in the doubles. 


were upset by file unsseded 
team of Ricardo Tano and 
Victor Peed, 7-6, 1-6, 6-1. 


Track Hall to Get Olympic Torch 


England Cuts Italy Lead 
LONDON. Aug. 6 (UPI)— 


U.S. T earn to Visit Poland 
SAN CLEMENTE. Calif.. 
Aug. 6 (UPI) — Nine members 
of the San Clemente High 
School championship volley- 
ball team will travel to Po- 
land for a 19-day series of 
exhibition games and work- 
shops. Besides playing in 
exhibiiton games, the Ameri- 
cans wHl take part in volley- 
ball workshops and view the 
Polish training techniques 
that helped lift that squad to 
a recent Olympic gold medal. 


CHARLESTON, W. Va.. Aug. 6 (AP>— Ceremonies are 
scheduled for tomorrow to bring a torch lighted from the 
Olympic flameat Montreal to the National Track and Field 
Hall of Fame. 

The torch, carried by 30 local runners in a nonstop 
relay from the United States-Canadian border, is to be 
presented to Gov. Arch A. Moore Jr. at the Capitol at 5 PJVL 
He will light an “eternal flame” from the torch, and the 
flame will be carried to the hall's headquarters. 


Yank Game 
Vs. Orioles 
Washed Out 


Continued From Page 13 


Yankees' Records 

BATTING 


HR.RBI.PC. 
Munson M 72 S 13 

Rivers 7 51 JOS 

0wmblfoa-13'4S J9i 
9 44 SJ6 
222 .30 


.2 Join Swedish Quintet „... 

STOCKHOLM, Aug. 6 (AP) ffiie 

— Two Americans, Jay Young 1 12 -2S 

and John Teny f will play lor Gambit n 39 
Solna of the Swedish basket- 
ball league next season, the 


Mar 

Kealy 

Veto 

Nettles 

Alomar 

Hendricks 

Mason 

Locklear 


club announced today. Young ywfc 


and Terry, both 23 years old, Jackson 
' for the University of EteT* 1 
last season. fid™? 


Team-AB. X513. H, M3. .274 HR— 77. 
PITCHING 
IP. W. L. . 

Holfzman 
Hunter 


HR.RBI.PC. 
3 30 -tf5 

0 7 .252 

1 4 337 
15 53 -ffll 
• I 1 .230 

3 7 .170 
112 .Iff 
0 0 .000 


10 I 0 
38 3 1 
175 14 6 
142 1! 6 
57 4 2 


Lyle 
Alexander 


IP. W. L 
IAS 9. 7 
316 12 II 
81 6 6 
132 6 7 


Mets 9 Records 

BATTING 


Ton* 


Fester 


HR. RBI. PC. 

2 24 .332 ; Grate 

8 3 -286 

Kraneml 7 37 -280 

Btrisdair 0 4 .278 

Hodasi 4 24 .370 

Van 0 2 Jot 

MJInur II 52 -262 

Millan I 19 26.1 


HR.RBi. PC 
3 18 251 
Phillies 3 24 246 

Stainer 2 12 242 

Manoual 3 22 243 

B'Xpcti 0 I .2J5 

Kinsman 32 72 .234 

Herrelson 1 19 21t 

Dwrer 6 S -1B0 


Taanv-AB, 3m H, 904, .245. HR-78. 
PITCHING 


Myrlcl! 

Koosman 

Vatladt 

Seavw 

Lockwood 


IP. W. L 
16 1 0 
155 13 7 
188 II 6 
IBS 9 6 
65 6 7 


Swan 

Lolicti 

Sanders 

Anodao 

Espinosa 


IP. W. L 
104 J I 
134 6 10 
33 1 2 
68 2- 5 
11 0 I 


Major League Baseball Box Scores and Standings 


FIRST GAME 

CHI CABO IN.) MONTREAL IN.) , 

ab r l» bl ab r h bi 

Hands? cf 5 12 2 Valentine cf 6 1 3 1 

Wallis cf 3 0 10 WGarrett 2b * I I 1 

5taerrififl ss 00 00 Ureer if 3 10 1 
Tyrone 3b 2 1 D 0 EWlllams llj 3 0.1 0 
Mad lock 3b 4 0 2 1 JWhito If 0 0 0 0 

Coleman p 0 0 0 0 Thornton lb 2 0 0 0 

8 0 0 0 Foil ss 6 D 2 2 
2 0 0 8 Parrish 3b 5 0 2 0 

5 112 toraansn If 3 0 0 0 

4 000 Rivera If 1000 

0 0 0 0 CTaylor 9 1 0 0 0 

6 0 3 1 Madanin ph 1 0 0 0 

60 10 Foote c *212 

2 10 0 Carlltwra » 2 0 0 0 
2 12 0 D Mirra* o 0 0 0 0 
20 0 0 Carter rf 2 0 0 0 
20 10 
0 0 0 0 


Sutter p 
Sel sfwr c 
J Morales rf 
UCocfc lb 
PRuKhel p 
THI lo 2b 
Mlttrurald e 
Kellettar ss 
Cardinal IT 
Rosalio 3b 
Bonham p 
Knowles p 


Summers If 3 110 


Total 
Cobs , 


43 6 14 6 


Total 44 5 10 S 
.. .000010013 0001— 6 
...110000 012 008 8— .5 
DP— Chi caso 1. Montreal 1. LOB-<hi- 
■ earn 12, Montreal 8. 2B— Foli, Valentine. 
HR— Monday <191. 5B — TrHIc. S-Carrl- 
Ihere, Bonham, Monday. SF—Jirwr. 

IP H R ER BB SO 


Bonham 

tlnoKrin 

Coleman 

Sutter 

PRuschel (W>3-2) 
Carrittiers 

D .Murray 

CTSiHor f Lrl-1 > 
HBP—tw Coleman 
ham. T— 3:21. 


7 2-3 
1-3 0 
1-3 2 
12-3 0 
3 0 

7 7 

1 1-3 5 
42-3 2 
[Fall}. 


WP— Bor 


PHILADELPHIA (H.) ST. LOUIS (N.J - 
„ abrhbi abrhbi 

Bowa ss 5 7 10 Mumpfny- rf a | i j 

GMeddox cf 3 i 1 I Kesrtneer ss 4 o 0 0 


Tolan cf 2 0 0 0 Brack If 
Schmidt 3b .20 10 MAndncn 
Johnstone rf 4 0 2 0 Simmons 


OBnwn. If 
Hutton lb 
Onto c 
Luzinski ph 
Undrumd pr 
TTavtor c 
Harmon 2b 
Boone ph 
McCarvr c 
Lon bora p 
DCash ph 
McGraw o 
Martin ph 


3 0'1 0 HrcCruz rf 
3 0 0 0- Harris cf 
3 0 3 0 KHranrfz lb 
lOOOWCrawfl 
0 0 0 0 LP.ichard 

0 0 0 0 Denny p 
2 0 0 0 Hra bosky 

1 O 00 


4 0 20 
0003 
3111 

3 111 
0000 

4 13 1 
3b 3 1 1 0 
2b 3 M 0; 

300 0 
P 0000 


000 0 
2 0 0 0 
I IS DO 
OOOD 
1 000 


• Total 

Philadelphia 
St. Look 
E— Oat ns. 


33 2 9 I Total 


Denny, 


30 6 10 4 
..001 ON 010— 2 

OMNI 31s— 6 

ICHernandz. John- 


done, McGraw, Kesslneer. DP — Ptilla- 

dol phial, St.l-Guia3.L0B— Philadelphia 
L St Louis 4. 20— HecOia. GJtafdax. 
HR— SI mm oiw 141. SB— Brack. 5— Kaat. 

SF— HecCrw, Humphrey. 

IP 

Lonboru (L.12-7) 6 

McGraw 2 

Denny (W.6-5) 7 2-3 

Hrabosky 1 1-3 

Save— Hrabosky 111). 

25,33V. 


H RERBBSO 
5 2 2 2 J 

5 4 2 0 1 

* 2 0 4 1 

0 0 0 

T— 2:12. 


SAN FRANCISCO (H.) 

■brhbi 

Tlwmasn cf 4 0 1 0 Royster 
MPerex a 4 0 0 0 Gilbreath 
Matthews Jf 3 0 2 0 Wynn cf 
Muncer -rf 3 0 0 0 Montane* 

DIE vans lb 3 0 0 0 Handersn 
Reitz 3b 3 0 0 0 Chaney SS 
DsRader c 3 0 0 0 Gaston . If 
Lemaster ss 3 0 1 0 Pocoroba c 
Dressier p 1 0 0 0 Morton p 
0000 
1-0 0 0 
OO D 0 
00 DO 
1000 


ATLANTA (N-> 

abr h bi 
1 5 110 

2b 41 1 0 
5 1)1 


1b 4 24 
rf 4 1 O 
4 I 2 
4 03 
3 00 
400 


Heaverio 
GAdams i 
Caldwell . 
CWdlams 
Seder ph 


Total 37 7 12 
... .000 000000— 
101 M000x— 


Total 29 0 4 0 

SaeFrantisoa 

Atlanta 

E— C. Williams, Thoms uni, ■ Lomas! er, 
Mwcw. DP— oBnFrartctscn 1, Atlanta 
LOB— San Francisco 2, Atlanta 8. 28— 

Gaston, Wynn, Chaney. Thomasson. HR— 
Montana: f7). SB— Gilbreath, Royster. 

IP H R ER BB SO 
4 1-3 9 7 5 1 

2-3 1 0 0 0 

2 2 0 0 0 

1 0 0 0 1 

9 4 0 0 


Dressier 11,2-8) 
Heaverio 
Caldwell 
C Williams 


A- Morton (W.2-8) 


WP-C Will lams. T— 3:05. A-6,633. 


FIRST GAME 
KANSAS CITY {A.) CHICAGO CA.) 

abrhbi ibrhbr 

Pwwatto If 5 110 Dent m 5020 

OKs.cf 5 122 Garr If SIIO 

GBratt 3b 5 111 UotmsM lb 4 1 2 O 


Mavbeny lb 4 2 I ) Orta dh 


McRae dh 
DN risen d 
Cswera rf 
Stinson c 
Patek ss 
Fwtute 2b 
Hassler 0 
UttBfl P 


3 12 0 WSteln 2b 
.1112 Lemon cf 
40 11 Kordbon rf 

4 12 1 Hairston rf 
4 0 10 KBell 3b 
4)21 P Kellr ph 
0 0 0 0 Essian c 
0 0 0 0 J Silencer ph I 0 0 O 

B Johnson a 0 0 0 0 
Vcfcovldi P OOOD 


3 0 2 1 

4 00 1 
4090 
30 10 
SHOO 
108® 
1 O 1 D 
3 0 10 


-.Total » 9 14 9 Total 35 2 10 2 

Alisas City 000005 112 — .» 

Crimea sdocoqooo 2 

, E-PbMl DP— Kansas CHv 1. Chiraet 
1. LOB— Kansas Oty 6, Chicago 9, 2B— 
^£2®!“* PS?* P-Kdlv. 3B— G.Bratt. HR- 
D.Helnm f|). SB-Pmmerte. S-K.Bcll. 

Haglar (W,l-7) 7 P 9 H a* E l ?B | S t 
UfWI 2 10 0 0 

(L9-1W 61-3 9 6 6 2 

^ 5 3 3 I 

WP-SJohnson. T— 2:29. 


CLEVELAND (A.) 

„ ^ abrhbi 

kuluar a 
Blanks so 

SK ,n L ef 

udty on 

Hendrick If 
BBetl St 
JFW«H lb 
Spites rf 
Fo»e c 
J Brawn a 
Hood p 


DETROIT f A.) 

abrhbi 
40 10 Leflore rf 30 11 
4 00 Meter If 20 10 
4 010 M5ts flier If 10 0 0, 
4 0 10 Oelhrie rf 4 0 10 
4 0 0 0 Staub dh 4 111 
d D 1 0 JThmsi lb 210 0 
3 110 Aftldrsez 3b 4 0 T 1 
3 D 1 0 Wecknfus e 4 00 0 
aoioveryzw ss a i 1 0 
0 00 0 PGarrfa 2b 3 0 0 0 
0 0 DO DRoberh p ODOll 


L ■ 


„TaW 33T 70 Total 30 3 63 

Owalaud 000000910—1 

Defrait ... 000100U*— 3 

E— P.Gilrii. DP-Defralf 1. LOB— 

Cleveland 5 , Detreif 7. 3B-Oallyte. 

A.Rodrlsuec. HR-Staub (9). SB-Mever 

2, Veneer, 

IP H RER6B50 
J. Bream (L.7-7) 6 2-3 5 2 2 3 5 

Hood 1 1-3 I I 1 I 

□Roberts (W.ll-Ili 9 7 10 0 

’ T— 2:10. A — 194)79. 


Saturday, August 7, 1976 

American League National Lea gue 


LAST NIGHT'S GAMES 
Baltimore at New York, rain. 
California at Oakland. 

Detroit 3, Cleveland . 

Kansas City 9, CUcago 2 (1st, 
Ml). 

1B S^ S qty.f t Chic ago (2d). 

_ Boston S, Mthranbeo 1. 
Minnesota at 


LAST NIGHTS GAMES 


THURSDAY NIGHT 
Baltimore S, devdand 2. 
Boston 5, Detroit 4. 

Cl 

Texas 1 , California 0 . 


New York at Pittsburgh, rain. 
Chicago 6, Montreal S (1st, 
twi„ 13 inn.). 

Chicago at Montreal (2d). 
Qndnnail at Los Angeles. 
Houston at San Diego. 

St- Lotds 6, PUladelpltix 2. 
Atlanta 7, San Francisco 0. 

THURSDAY NIGHT 
New York 7, Pittsburgh 4. 
Chicago 4, Montreal 3 fist). 
Chicago at Montreal (2d, rain). 
Cincinnati 3, Los Angeles 2. 
Philadelphia 3, StTLouis 2 (S 
rnn^. rain). 

San Diego 4, Houston 3. 

San Francisco 2 , Atlanta I. 


New York 

Baltimore 

Cleveland 

Boston 

Detroit 

Milwaukee 


.610 

JSOS 

•495 

.481 

.467 

■452 


GJL 


STANDING OF THE TEAMS 
Eastern DnUbu 
W. L. Pet. 

64 41 

53 52 
52 53 
51 55 

49 56 
47 57 

Western Division 
W. L. Pet. 

64 40 
55 52 

54 53 

50 54 

46 5S 

47 61 


6JL 


11 

12 

13K 

15 

1654 


Kansas City 

Oakland 

Minnesota 

Texas 

Chicago 

California 


.615 

JS14 

-505 

-4S1 

.442 

.435 


GJL 


low 

litt 

14 

18 

19 


(Last night's (ah umes ml indbded.) 


STANDING OF THE TEAMS 
Eastern Division 
W. L. Pet 
Philadelphia 72 34 ^79 
Pittsburgh 58 48 .547 
New York 55 55 .500 
Chicago 47 61 .435 
St. Loins 44 60 .423 
Montreal 36 64 .360 
Western Division 
_ W. L. PcL 

Cincinnati 70 39 
Los Angeles 59 4S 
Houston 56 55 
San Diego 52 59 
Atlanta 48 60 
San Francisco 48 62 


14 

19 

26 

27 

33 


.642 

.551 

-505 

.468 

-444 

.436 


GJL 


10 

15 

19 

211 

22 \ 


(Las) night's Mines not indudcd.l 


World Team Tennis 


t, . 


, _ THURSDAY NIGHTS MATCH 
3as}an 31 , Hawaii 13. 

„ STANDING OF THE TEAMS 
EaUwn Division . Western Divisteu 
^ w. U Pcf. W. 1. Pet. 

-Now York 38 10 737 Phowl* 2* 10 722 

Umland w IB ^14 Golden G. 2 i 14 ^4) 

Pjitsbwgb 19 20 .*87 L An*ttes 18 18 

BiBtcfl 16 ?l ^32 1 San DJaao H 26 797 

IS 21 Hawaii 10 28 .M3 
'Clinched Avista ttfl*. 


TODAY'S PROBABLE PITCHERS 
BUtfaqw at New Yorfc (2 P.M.) New York at Fittsbugfa (2. twt- 


— Grimsley 
(4-2). 


(4-5) vs. TJdrow 


CaJifonna at Oakland — Hartzeli 
(3-2) vs. Torrez (S-10t. 


Cleveland at Detroit— Dobson 
UI-10) vs. Fidiych (11-4). 


n.i— Espinosa (0-2) and Sea- 
ver (8-6) vs. Kison (8-7) and 
Medich (5-10). 

Chicago at Montreal fn.)— R. 
Reuschel (10-8) vs. Fryman 
(9-8). 


Kansas City at Chicago — Gura 
1 1-0) vs. Gossage (6-10). 


Ctndnnati at Los Angeles (ru— 
i. John (6-7). 


Milwaukee at Boston— Rodriguez 
(4-7) vs. Tiant il0-10). 


Mumesota at Texas fn.) — Leub- 
her i2-2) vs. Hargan (4-3). 


Zachry (ff-31 vs, 

Houston at San Diego in.)— An 
dujar (6-7) vs. FoUters (2-3). 
Pblhdelpina at SL Louis— Kaat 
(10-6) vs. Falcone (7-11). 
San Francisco at Atlanta Uwi.) 
— D'Acquisto (3-6) vs. Mes- 
seramith (11-9). 


THURSDAY NIGHT 
MINNESOTA (A.) KANSAS CITY (A.) 

ab r h bi ab r h bl 

4 0 10 PumiEtt* If 3 1)1 

3 110 OHs cf S I 0 0 

4 12 1 GBratt 3b 4 f 3 0 
4 12 0 Maybfny 1b 4 0 0 0 
4 0 2 1 McRae dh 2 110 

3 0 0 0 Cowens rf 4 12 2 

4 0 0 0 JMrtlner c 
2 1.1 1 Patek ss 
1 0 0 0 FWhltp 2b 
1 0 0 0 Leonard p 
10 0 1 Mingari p 
0 0 0 0 
0 0 0 0 


Bosfpdc cf 
SdllUpy M 
Carew 1b 
Braun dh 
Cubbage 3b 
Hlsla If 
Wmsar c 
Fflrt rf 
Randall 2b 
OHw ph 
Terrell 2b 
Sinuar n 
WCrnobel p 


4QOO 
2 0 1 ? 
4 110 
0 0 00 
0000 


Total 
[MJimesafa 
Kansas Oty 
E— Rardail. 
I Minnesota 3, 


32 695 


31 4 9 4 Total 
.-000012 100— .4 

21000210x^4 

DP— Kansas City 3. 10B- 
Kansas Cltv *. 20 — Cowans 


Po- 


2. Carew. 3&-Forri. SB— G.Brelt, 
ouetle. Sr— Poquottp, Fort. 

. IP H R =R BB SO 

Sinaer (LA-Bj 5 3-3 7 S 4 2 3 

W.CampbeU 21-3 2 ! 1 2 2 

Leonard 71.3 « 4 4 I 2 

Mingari 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 

Save-sMuiBOri CIO). HBP— by Leonard 
tHisle). by W.Campbel! (McRae). WP— 
Sinow 2. T— 2:44. A— 14344. 


Milwaukee and isn’t ready to 
play. ' Fred Stanley jammed 
his left ankle in the rain in 
Milwaukee, and it puffed up 
overnight. He isn’t ready to 
play. Sandv Alomar also hurt 
his left ankle in the rain in 
Milwaukee, but he was ready 
to play last night 

Then there’s Ed Figueroa, 
who has had an ailing right 
arm since an encounter with 
the air-conditioning in a Bos- 
ton hotel last week. Dick Tid 
row had been scheduled to 
take Figueroa’s place for to- 
day’s game, but Doyle Alex- 
ander, who was to have 
pitched lost night’s game, 
will start today instead. Cat- 
fish Hunter is to work tomor- 
row. 

Weaver wiH use Rudy May. 
the former Yankee, today and 
either Jim Palmer or Ross 
Grimsley tomorrow. Palmer 
has been suffering from 
back problem incurred two 
starts ago, and Weaver won’t 
know until tomorrow whether 
the right-hander can pitch. 

“He said he’d pitch if we 
need him,’* Weaver said, “but 
it might be better if we can 
get by without using him 
here at all.” 


HOUSTON IN.) 

ab r b bl 


si 

tf 

rf 


3010 

3 000 

4 9 10 


SAN DIEGO CM.) 

abr h b 

3 0 0 0 Grubb If 
0 0 0 0 EHmeez 
5 0 2 2 WDavto 

4 0 0 0 Winfield 
4 0 2 0 hrte lb 
4 12 0 Puentes 
4 0 0 0 Do Rader 

__ 2 0 0 0 Kendall 
RMetzger ss 3 0 1 0 Frislbn 
Boswell ph 110 0 CMetzsar 
Mdohlln p 2 0 0 0 
DaVanon ph I 0 0 0 
Sanbrlo p O 0 a 0 . * 

LRoterfs ph 1 I 1 1 


Gross rf 
Howard pr 
Cabell 3b 
Geitena cf 
Watson lb 
JCruz if 
Hermann c 
Andrews :b 


2b 

3b 

c 

p 

p 


4 I I 
3 ! 0 
3 1 I 

2 1 I 

3 0? 
20 0 
ODD 


Total 34 3 8 3 Total 27 A 7 

Houston 000 000 003-. 

San Dieuo 000103DQX-4 

B— Herrmann. DP— Houston 1. Sin 
Dltuo I. LOB — Houston 9, Sen D>SS0 
28— Grubb, Kondall. HR — DoRaifer (6) 
S3— W-DavU, Winfield, Do Rader. 5- 
E.Henwndz. . Frelsleben. SF— DoRader. 

IP H R ER BB SO 
Mdstiuhlln (LI-1) 6 7 4 4 3 

Sambllu 2 O 0 0 1 

Frislbn (W.7-9) 81-3 6 2 2 4 

C- Metzger 2-3 2 1 1 1 

Save-C. Metzger (8). HBP — by 
Mclaushlln (Ivie). T-2:10. A— 9. 796. 
CINCINNATI (H.) LOS ANGELS W.» 


P<a* 3b 
FNrei 3b 
Grlfftv rf 
Moran 2b 
G Faster If 
Bench c 
TPetw lb 

Geranlmo 
Cncflcign 
Norman 


abrhN 

5 13 0 Lopcs 2b 
0 0 0 0 Bucfow It 
4 0 0 0 RSmitfi rf 
4 0 0-8 Garaev lb 

3 0 I 1 Cey 3b 

4 0 10 Ruutll SS 
3 2 2 1 Lacy d 

Cf 4 0 I 0 Yeaner c 
sa 3 0 1 1 Sutton v 
■ 4 0 10 Baker oh 

Hough p 


abrhN 
4 0 10 

3 1 2 

4 0 0. 
4 120 
4 0 11 
4 0 1 I 
300 0 
4 00 0 
2000 
10 00 
0 0 O 0 


Total 343 103 Total 33 2 72 

Cintinntti 0DM0I 000— 3 

, DP— LW Aimta 1. LOB-CncinniH 7, 
Los Angolas 6. 2B— Loses, RushJI, Budt- 
nar. Rest. HR— T.Peraz Da. 

IP H RERBBSO 
Nwnttl l W, 11-2) 9 7 2 2 2 6 

SNton (U2-9) 7 8 3 3 2 3 

Hough 2 2 0 0 0 2 

. HBP— by Hough <6.F«tgr). T-2:26. 

A-46.0H. 

CALIFORNIA CA.) TEXAS (Al 




ab rhbi 

ab r h bl 

temy 

» 

4 0 0 0 Clines if 

4 0 10 

Chalk 

to 

3 0 0 0 DThmesn ss 

2 0 10 

ftietton 

ph 

10 0 0 Hmll 3b 

3 0 00 

Bonds 

rf 

4 0 2 n Hargrave lb 2 00 D 

Solaita 

lb 

4 0 10 Burrata rf 

HU 

Boctile 

ir 

3 0 0 0 Grieve dh 

2 0 0 0 

Sn«3 

cf 

3 0 0 0 Randle 2b 

7 00 1 

TDmls 

dh 

3 0 10 Benfauc cf 

3 0 2 0 


(Fliuru in naren lhfs« are saasm's wni-iost reards.) 


RoJadksn 
Humphry 
Roa p 


3b 3 0 i o Sundbcra 
3 0 10 Blylewm 
OOOO 


3 0 0 0 
0 0 0 0 


Yanks Exchange Pitchers 

The Yankees, not a team 
to stand still with the same 
players even though the/ re 
1 1 games ahead in first place, 
exchanged pitchers with their 
Syracuse farm club yesterday. 

They recalled Ron Guidry, 
who visited for seven weeks 
earlier in the season, and out- 
righted Jim York, who had 
no options left. York pitched 
in three games during his 
three-week stay with the 
Yankees. Guidry, a 25-year- 
oid left-hander, pitched ear- 
lier in only a third of an 
inning for the Yankees but 
for Syracuse compiled a 5-1 
won-lost record with nine 
saves and an 0.68 eamed-run 
average. 


Aussie Wins Pool Series 
SYDNEY, Australia, Aug. 6 
(Reuters) — Eddie Chariton, 
Australia’s world open snook- 
er champion, won a $50,000 
three-way challenge series in- 
corporating billiards, snook- 
er and pool, tonight. The 
46-year-old Australian beat 
Rex Williams. England's 
world billiards champion, and 
Joe Baisis, American, pool 
star in -the series. 


Pro Transactions 


BASEBALL 

NEW YORK (AL)— Real lid Ron Gultfnr. 
nutter, from Syracuse of ttw intornittonal 
Lmuu*. Assigned Jim Yocfc pitcher, to 
Syracuse. 

FOOTBALL 

HOUSTON f AFC)— Waived Mite Montgomery, 
witt- receiver. 

MINNESOTA f UFO— Traded Stew Unman, 
offwive .WOrtl, and a Future draft choke, 
to San Frwidseo tor wtndten Hill, 

Alim, defensive backs. 

WASHINGTON (NFC)— Signed Dennis John- 
son, defensive end. 


Preseason Football 


?i I 5 i 


Total 3)040 Total 

California OMOOOOOO-.B 

Taos .... . . aioooooox— i 

DP— California 2, Texas I. LOa-Cail- 

ftvrnla 4, Ton* 3. 2B— Burroughs. 5— 
D.Tbomnson, Grieve. SF— Randle. 

IP H RERBBSO 

R «s (L6-I3) 3 5 1114 

Blvleven (W,9-121 9 6 0 0 0 4 

T— 1:46. A-M79. 


LAST NIGHT’S GAMES 
San Dlno "t Nets England U. 
Baltimore aj- Washington 3. 

TO DATS GAME5 
Buffalo at Clnrimratl fn.l. 
Cleveland «. Atlanta. 

Chicago vs. Seattle (nj. 

Dallas at Las An coles |nj. 
Minnesota at Kansag oty (n.). 
Now Orleans af Houston In.). 
St. Louie vs. Oakland (n.) 
Tampa Bay n. Green Bar in 1. 

TOMORROW'S GAMES 
Denver at San Francisco. 

Miami « Detroit 


The British doubles team of 
David and John Iioyd, broth- 
ers, defeated Paulo Bertoluc- 
ci and Adriano Panatte of 
Italy, 6-8, 3-6, 6-3, .18-16, 
6-2, today in the doubles on 
the second day of .the Euro- 
pean Zone Davis Cup Tea- 
ms Final. With two singles 
matches tomo rrow Italy 
leads, 2-1. 

The Lloyd's saved 5 match 
points on the way to their 
nearly four-hour doubles vic- 
tory. 


; ritraj-^f liKSa .defeated Jizn' 
Sir 47 annutes.- ; .. 


TJoyd Gains Semifinal 


Tanner Advances ■ • 

COLUMBUS, Ohio. Aug. 6 
(UP^ — Top-seeded -Roscoe 
Tanner defeated Byron Bert- 
ram of South Africa, 6-4, 
3-6, 6-4^ today in the 587,500 
Buckeye tournament, moved 
indoors because of rain. 

Second-seeded Vijay Am- 


kiamesha lake, n.y^ 

Aug. 6--BD1 Lloyd, the host 
pro, a semifinal berth 
today in the S 10,000 Concord 

tennis - tno mam enL 

Xloj^, seeded" No. 4i 
crushed;- Carios DeBrito of. 
Brant, 6-3r..&L 
Toprseeded . Deon Joubert 
of South Africa zaltied for a 
1-6; ' 6-2, 6-4 victory over 
John HoHaday of La- Jolla, 
Calif. Second-seeded • Zan 
Gueriy of Houston was beat- - 
eh by Eric Friedler of Evans- 
ton; HL, 7-6, 3-e r ;7-5,. and- 

Mike Wayman of England 

ousted John Austin of Rolling 
Hills; Calif., 64, 6-3 in the 
other quarterfinals. 



^-Tickets 
. days, of 

C^jen Ti 

■ are already 
"ment 
-terday. 
'..’.Eaziy.seflo 
dieted for tfi 
of. the eveai 
Sqrt. 1 thro 
the West "STt . 
Forest HiU % 
Mike Bum 
retaxy of tfi 


■ ^ art 


Mets Rained Out; 


. yesterday 
mentstoeof. 5 
itable g 

large bli 

rirculation. 

- “Alotof 
shut out,’' 
-interest in 





r: 


By PAUL L. 

SpedalteXbt 

PITTSBURGH, Aug. 6— - 
Though he had just won his 
first game in more than a 
month. Jon Matlack of the 
Mets was far from pleased 
with his performance. . 

“It was a bad night,” the 
left-hander said last night 
after he defeated file Pirates, 
7-4. “I couldn’t throw the 
'ball where I wanted it and 
I had no curve. I didn’t feel 
at ease. 1 was erratic and 
sporadic and everything 
else.” - 

' After a steady rain 
tonight’s game was railed off 
and the teams will -play a 
doubleheader beginning at 
6:05 PJVL tomorrow. Tom 
Seaver is scheduled to face 
Bruce Bison in the first game 
and Nino Espinosa goes 
against Doc Medich in the 
second game. 

Matlack. whose won-lost 
record now is 11-6, is rarely 
satisfied with his pitching, 
even when he’s winning. He 
was helped last night by an 
uncharacteristic 17-hit -attack 
bv his teammates that more 
than canceled the effects of 
Willie Stargell's grand-slam 
homer for the Pirates. 

Since he won his last game 
on July 1, Matlack — the Mets 
most consistent pitcher early 
in the season — bad fallen on 
hard times. On the way to 
four straight losses, he Bad 
got virtually no support from 
his teammates at bat or in 
the field. In his last three 
losses, the Mets had scored 
a total of two runs for him. 

Though Matlack said he 
had little last night, the only 
serious problem he had was 


MONTGOMERY 

SWTprtrTteui 

StargelL He had struck out 
the big first baseman the 
first two times up, and faped 
him again in the sixth inning 
with the bases loaded, 

“It was a bard curve,'.’ Mat- 
lack said of his 1-2 pitch to 
Stargell. “It was belt high, 
it split the middle of the 
plate and it left the stadium 
in a hell of a huny. That’s 
the kind of pitch home runs 
are made of.” 

Stargell declined to make 
mudt of the blast, his 10th 
grand slam in his 15-year 
major league career. “Maybe 
he was thro win’ where Z was 
swingin’,” Stargell said. 

Stargell said that usually 
on the first two pitches he 
gets, he looks for a pitch to 
hit hard. “The next two, Fm 
trying to hit it up the mid- 
dle,” he said. “If it goes out 
fine. But usually it doesn’t” 

Stargell said that only one 
of bis 382 homers in the 
major leagues had been hit 
with the idea of driving it 
out of the park. “It was 
against Tony Cloninger of 
Milwaukee maybe 10 years 
ago,” he said. '7 said Tm 
gonna hit this pitch out, and 
I did. It 'Surprised me more 
than anybody else.” 

Among the Mets’ big hit- 
ters last night was their 36- 
year-old first baseman, Joe 
Torre; who had three hits in 
the game (Roy Staiger also 
bad three and Bud Hairel- 
son had four). 

“I fferi .good, what can I 
tell you," Torre said. “It 
feels like another year of 
employment .coming up.” 


mitments- 
for each. of. * 
of. the evAt 
.BillTalbetv 
-former dire 
more ticket 
series subs 
.and prese t 
able for put 
about 3,500. 

Tickets a 
Shea Stadhr 
Tennis Cli- ■ 

Centra] 

groups . tha ' 
their tickets 
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THE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGVST 7 , 1976 



15 


Britton and Muraskin Among Jersey Golf Semifinalis fs 


By GORDON S. WHITE Jr. 

gpedil toTheWewr«*H«f< 

■' PLAINFIELD, ■ NJ.; Aug. 6 
‘-^ill* Britton, Gr^ Zortia, 
EttVe* KTiriaskiti ' and Jerry 
' Ooumn^ w6& among them 
■ have? won too Metropolitan, 
"'five 1 Wfestc&ester end one 
-tie w Jeraiey' amateur titles, 
.plus sis See goJf tourneys, 
::&cante : ttfe' ^enti^inaiists of. 
'. the ,74th axtnnal' Metropolitan 
Golf Association amateur 
championship today. 

It took golfers with such 
crecfentiali to riiakfi it over 
'• the . 6^00-ytof ' * Plainfield 
'•Country Chib course, where 
they completed the> first and 
quarterfinal - rounds.- today 
despite- ia- 9&4mnute : delay 
'when -thornier rumbled over 


the- trees and hills of the 
region.; ’They finished -the 
quarterfinals in heavy .rain 
that only worsened the par-. 
.72 Plainfield course. 

Hie' 20-year-pld' Britton, 
who is -the defending, cham- 
pion and youngest mas, ever 
. to have won the Met crown, 

• ousted ' Jay Mottoia of -Stony 
Ford, 2 and 1, and then John 
-O’Hara, of: Winged Foot, 3, and 
-2. Brittwris a Staten Island, 
and the’ first Met- amateur 
champion, from a public links 
e coarse— Silver Lake. - ■ 

Zorila, a 28-year-old who 
'has won the' Westchester 
- amateur three times, ad- 
vanced by beating the medal- 
ist, Jay Blomenfeld, 2 and 1, 

' in a quarterfinal after a 3- 


and-rl triumph oyer . Clem • * Today, oribne of the most 
Xing" Jr. of Bine Hflj- difficult; courses in thi& East, 

Ifcraskim thectiriHitWeHb * . , courvihe was very . steady, 

missing only one fairwdy in 


Chester amateur champion 
and the 1570 Jersey winner, 
was forced to 20 holes in his 
quarterfinal ■ test with Mark 
; McBride* before a par 4 there 
•Won the match. The 29^ear- 
■old lawyer heat Chris Estelle 
Southward To, 4 and 3* in 
the first round during which 
■be/, won . two holes with 
bbg®s*.- ^ 

^vCoundlle,.- the 41-yearrold^ 
sentimental favorite, contur- 


the quarterfinal round as he 
pdf- .out Dave Ragaini, the 
197fWestdtester open cham- 
pion, 3 and Z ' ^ 

Courville, who also Won 
the Westchester title In I$62, 
had defeated' .James Bender 
of Echo Lake, 4 and 3, in the 
first round. 

Courville said, ‘Tm not 
hitting the hall the way I 


on thatleft' side any more?* 
he said. 

‘The way to win in match 
play is just not to make inis- 
taks'and then win when. f* 16 
other fellow makes, them,” 
Courville; continued. Hestack 
to tat plan, making only two 
mistakes in the- quarterfinal 

as. he shot one under par— 
the best round so far in, the 
I tournament . 

Both- of Ms mistakes re- 


• birred the fourth with a 25- 
'■ foot -putt, 'the teight wilh a 
fine chip shot for a 3-inch 
putt,' arid the 12th with a 15- 
foot putt.-.- : ?. • j. 

Courville wiii.njeet Muras- 
kin, and Britton will play 
Zorila id tomdriwv’s'matehes* 
which start at 12:30 PAL -■ ■ . 

■ -.-•THE SUMMARIES;- 


First Round — Jay .Blumenfeld, Galloping 
Hills: Mealed WiiH s Saae, --PlgWIeld,-! 
ups - Gras Jnrila, Slwanov. -defeated Oem 


Kino. Jr., Blue Ttlll, 3 . 'and );■ Jolm 
O'Bara, Wmsed Foot, defeated Lou tfutler- 


amd Jus amazing golf that like to. Tm coming over too 
seems to be better than ever/ ■' much with fte-right side. But 


sulted in bogeys, but he'lost 
of those holes to 


The 1973 Met champion and . 
sax-time Ike winner under- 
went extensive surgery for 
removal of a malignancy in 
February- of 1975.' 


I have to plqy - that way 
now.” The surgery affected 
mstly the left ride of Jals neck 
and his left shoulder mus- 
cles. “I don’t feel anything 


only one 
Ragaini. ' 

• . Courville shoots os long 
that he reached the'back of 
the second green with a No. 8 
irdn approach shot The hole 
is a 445-yard, par-4 test that 
Courville won with 1 par. He 


mark, Richmond County, 4 end -3;. Bill 
Britton, Wlrer like, defeated Jay 'ttot- 
Wi, Etonv Ford, 2 and 1; Mart McBride. 
Westtiamolon, defeated. Paul Pfchtr ,- Norm 
Hempstead, 19 tales; Dare Muraskin, Fen* 
. ifoy, defeat* Chris Estelle, SnRtimrd Ho, 
■ 4 and 3; JetTY- Courville,- Shwahaven,. de- 
feated James Sender, feta Lake. J'and 
3; Dare Rwwlnl, Wrkapyl, defeated Jimmy 
Dee, -RJchiewoodr N.J., 20 holes. 
Quarterfinal Round— Zorila defealod Blnmen- 
f?W, 2 and t; Britton •datefed ' 0*ftera, 
3 and 2; Muraskin defeated JAcSride^ 20 


‘ holds; 
and 2. 


Courville defeated flajjahil, 1 3 




People in Sports 


WM keffain Pride W^ er Shuns. Bids; to Finish College 

■ v ? r_ , & ■ ' '' idM ValuHi — imi-i-fimmiiiiMli i m v -urn nr-’ ■mii.imri MAWS <KU»- A v^. .1 ' 1. ! 


Co trtfimed Trbn Page 18 
world,’ 7 said Foster, who had 



•: Palmer of Palhf Springs; CaRL, wafc&ng KnSpott; 
. ' ring Thursjiay’s round of the $90,000 European 
.* .5 golf championship at Stenririgdale, England. 

... ’ . £ ' i ,* • \ • ■* 'r -• 


*s. 





f 5 -Stroke Lend 


! been - rated the co-favorite 
With .Guy prut of France, the 

eventual •MgJi.htHTiles , chain- 
-n pion. “i. think Tm a kit. bet- 
• ter than, that hi fact, I know 

The ^women’s 1,500 reaf- 
- finnedaMfes -Kn yjmkina’s brii- 
liaxtce,- - after her. amazing 
sweep of the. 800 and .1,500 
-at Montreal, TypicaHy, ,sbe 
reprinted away from .Francie 
Larrieu^. Lutz pn . the final 
:-tecfcstretcb • ; aitfaough ‘ the 
American stall- finished » 
4.-06A once a respectable 
; -rime for any women mUer. 

Mike .Durkin, of Chicago 


reports of his so-called defec- 
tion in Moa tread. •* 

‘‘After’ the Olympics, I am 

»» Fha ■ 10*70 


really relaxed,” the ‘ 1972 


lead over Sandra 
n the 890,000 Euro- 
omen’s . golf ebam- 




m 





■ ]./ '' , \ " ' -■ l , ' used a ftial ^purl in ti&e last 

NGDALE, England, . * Mrs.Higuchi, scrfimWing to -s50:jt»tete to overtake Ana- 
DPpj-The pace-set- save par, -finished- with-, a tcriy Mamaatov by five feet 
ko ffiguchi of Japan .- ^ 0 ^^ she dropped a 20- -’•Oroute - to. a, meet -record 
c-imder-par. 68 today 3^8.4 Manaabov’s -time — 

•-hole total of -210,. foirter for a birdie at the 13th . -Igs-Uso was tee metric 

r par, and a fiv.e- • and eagled the l6fli by holing ..emrivrfeot of a. 3:56 mii^; 

. a-25-Tooter. That left her five • 

shots.. clear of- Miss Palmer, 
who Was unable to' reduce 
1 the defidt as. both made pars 
- on the last two holes. . * 

Miss Palmed* appeared; to 
have a chance of 'pulling a 
. ' stroke back at the 18th when 
Mrs.- Higuchi hit. her long 
-.wood into i trap. Brit Miss 
Palmer, who was in the heart 
n of the green, then saw 'Mrs. 

Higuchi come out of the sand 
to within four feet of the cup 
•to save her par. Miss Palmer 
ur,. said: "It was very depress- 

"big names- on the<- • .j ^oJdn’t believe 

that her swaying ' swing 
would hojd' tip Under pres- 
sures. But she has such su- 
perb tuning anrf rhythm' and • _ .. , 

is -playing really welt "What gS9nha^wfiftU«,^iDM. 

kflled'meW&s that eagle-putt ^ 

the 16th.' Rye- shots 'ST a 
it to make/up .-aridlfs 'going 'TwaSinw, - UniaB, 


‘aimer, winner of the 
lited States women’s 
1 runner-up here last 
fayed ' almost flaw- 
in her round of 70 
ut still lost ground 
liguchl, a regular on 
>s* Professional Golf 
on tour. Silvia Ber- 
of Argentina shot a 
alone in third place 


One of the more amaapng 
performances came from an 
improvised. American contin- 
gent of Foster, Glance, Mil- 
lard Hhpaptoa and. Riddick jn 
winning the 400 -raeter relay. 
Even with less than perfect 
passes on at least two of the 
legs, the, quartet ran 38.56, 
the fastest, metric time' run 
in the United States. 

-Although losing the 100 
■and .in the sprint relay, Bar- 
zqs appeared as unconcerned 
about .defeat as he was about 


Olympic, sprint king said, 
.“My weight/ is more than 
I need here. I- have too much 
water in my muscles. In 
Canada; it was tod - cold. 
Here, it was too warm. 

The 26-year-old Ukrainian 
was noncommittal about 
.whether he would try to re- 
gain the Olympic gold medal 
_ at. the 1980 Games' in 
Moscow. 

■ "I will run one, two, maybe 
three years,” he said: “'Be- 
fore' 1980, i wifi decide 
.whether to go again.” 

If Borzov was relaxed, 
..Dwight Stones ’was busy 
squawking after catching a 
glimpse' of the high-jump 
facility. 

. “It stinks,” said the out- 
spoken Californain who was 
'hoping to improve on * his 
worid record of 7-7% set 
test Wednesday night in 
Philadelphia. ‘There’s gulleys 
on the surface and the path 
leading to it is not' stable, 
with these runways' for other 
events.”' •• • •••-- 

Told that rain was fore- 
cast for tomorrow after- 
noon^ program, . the ,6-foot- 
5-iuch Stones, who had been 
bothered by a watery takeoff 
area in Montreal and settled 
for a bronze m&dal, said, 
“Good, that’ll screw it up 
even more.” • • 


, John Naber, who won four 
gold medals and one silver - 
medM as a swimmer for the “ 
.United States Olympic team 
iat Montreal, has no intention 
of cashing in his success 
this year. .. . ” 

“I’ve been off er^l a lot of 
proposals,” said the 20-year- 
old senior from the Universi- 
ty of Southern California. 
“But Tm telling the offerers • 
to come back in a year. I’ve 
still got another year of 
school left, and if they’re in- 
terested enough, they’ll wait 
I don’t need any of .the . 
money that I could get right 
now. My parents are relative- 
ly .affluent, and I know I’ll 
always be able ' to earn 
enough 'to support myself." 

^ Naber, who will be honored 
today by friends and admtr- ' 
ers at Menlo Park, Calif., said 
his immediate 1 goal was to 
promote swimming in the 
United States, something be 
feels Mark Spitz should have 
done after the Munich Olym- 
pics in 1972. 

"Four years ago, the United 
States had the., perfect . 
* spokesman who could have 
promoted^ swimming,” said 
Naber. "But he could hardly 
talk English.” 



'About ■’five" days before 
they were to depart for the 
coast. Woody called me at 
home and said that I was 
welcome to come with him 
to the Rose Bowl,” the stu- 
dent raid.. “If I remember 
right, they left on a Saturday 
and he called me on Monday 
t or Tuesday night I tojd him 
.thatl didn’t want to griL" / 

, .A spokesman for Ohio 
•State said the university 
would not comment beyond 
a . statement , issued . on 
Wednesday by Ed' Weaver, 
the athletic director. Weayer 
described the accusations as 
“character assassination,” 
arid denied the allegations’. 


to the loss of his athletic eli- 
gibility-’ 1 

Hunt was accused of using 
a credit card .owned by' a 
Spartan alumnus, T.. Michael 
Doyle, whom therN.CA-A- 
Called a “representative of 
the university’s' athletic in- 
terests." ‘ ' 

Michigan ' State/ which has 
been barred froin television 
and bowl games for thfree 
years,- unsuccjessfully'’ asked 
the .N.CLAiA.- to reverse its 
ruling. Tfie hearing oh the 
Hunt, suit wifi begin' Friday 
in LanSipg, Mich- 


Duom 


John 'Naber 


Continuing a serips on al- 
leged violations by the Ohio 


State football recruiting, pro- 
gram, the Michigan State stu- 
dent newspaper reported that 
a prospective Buckeye -player 
was offered an expense-paid 
trip to .the 1974 Rose Bowl 
game by Coach Woody Hayes 
of Ohio State. • • *• • 

The Michigan State News 
said the allegation was made 
by a student, -who was not 
identified, who currently 
plays for a college in the Big 
Ten, but was recruited by 
Ohio State. ' 


. Joseph Eqnt, a defensive 
back. on.. the Michigan' State 
football 'team, who .was 
barred from playing next sea- 
son ■ as a result of the 
university’s three-year, sus- 
pension by the National Col- 
legiate Athletic Association, 
is protesting the action. 

Hunt has filed suit in Unit- 
ed States District Court ask- 
ing that the suspension be 
set.aside.. His .attorneys ar- 
gued, that Hunt did not have 
a proper hearing,, did not 
have a chance to face his 
accusers, and never received 
adequate notice of the kind 
of conduct that could lead 


t Dos Labraaten, a left 
from - Sweden Who has si{ 
to' play-' with' the ’ Winnipeg 
Jets* of the World ' Hockey 
Association next season, wiU 
represent his country once 
m6r£ before' joining the Jets 
The ’ Jets, have announced 
that the 5-foot-9-inch Swede 
will play- for his country- in 
the Canada -Cup series in 
Canada and- the -United 
States next month. • ... .. 

.■ Thomas Rogers- 


Ameri Soccer League 

LAST NIGHTS GAMES 


Connecticut 2, New York 1. 
at T< 


Cleveland at Tacoma, 

'."■TONIGHTS GAMES 
New York al Rhode Island. 
Los Angeles at Sacramento. 


tour are playing in 
-nament, which is 
3,500 to the winner, 
tiguchi’s round in- 
nj eagle and ‘ four 
and . :spme . great 
7i the face of Miss 
nnstant pressure. 


U. S.-U.S.S.R. Track Summaries 


MEN’S TRACK EVENTS 
JflO-Mekr Dash-1, Sim* ftiddirt, PhiladH- 
phla. I (LIS seconds; 2, Valeri Sonov. 
SmRee UnhMb OrlBJBr t. Harw Glance. 
0:1DJ3 j J. Nikolai 


. _ . tot to make up r -mKr irs g 


.0:13 4. 

Soviet c Unlan, 


— Vuach^Jav^Koir^kln. 

‘H 1 1 i.7/ ” — * • -••- (i —- 

4fl04UeMr . Dash—' I, Benny Bnwn. Mibitu, 


- cur from^three^io ’- '-- • TH E-i.*EAOIN&SCOS ES^-- r Ga«- a ^54«»i 

-es, hut she got lief r oieW Higom : '-:c J.:A ; ofS; ' 


ether, at the. sixth Jffg* :S b 219 r uace 

-sDirit when' - s6e ^S!S.r r r ■ U"' 1 


when ' ^ sfie 


- a 1 7 -SSL^Stt:::' 

■aimer, me&dwhile. Bate Stm -J3 is 72 — za Harvey Gtanca. Mniart u -— 


76" 73 71 


iV-i-fr* Jinp grdb . 
, Ana^eli Marffintnv, 


Durfeiiv Chicago, 
,, ortvioui record. 
United Stales. 1965^; 


^Hanbton 

.. .'MdAiiidS ^::.v:::L : ::7r7a-ri-^ STlSSSSi 

t, feet or less, both 1 Alcdf.-'.l ...".JJIa 73-^a* record, MRjJhr Soviet union, 1975; a«»- 

Laun Baugh .72 76 77 — 225 viocs aC^ m i s ry rgcoyd, Q^3kfi, hy Southern 

Jan Shnheftton . ...... 72 ED7>-225 2/SovW Union. o:3MS. 

,r * Vladimir GpluboiaiY.- 


cree birdie' chances-' w -mShuw ' 

tfee ' " 

3^’s. 


i, at 130, /efs" Buttle 
ps Bead I To Start in 




Soviet UnWu. ldKjMr T «« Wtr. 
* vier, 


Big 


Virgin, Lebanon, 
itn. So- 
Mabdota. San 
n Zotov. Sdrfct 


- r MEN’S FlELtf E VENT S 

&-V AMaT SoiHdonov, Soviet N 
r $ 4 _ jplndtet tmaet a^j 


. C. Golf ] Giant Game 

Continued Fn»n Page 13 l Mlto.meJS&uSlUrttl 






4-fS-' 

i 






a-. ; 


I; 


t ed From Rage . 13 ■ 

cted -only one birdie : 
if. ' CcBdri^ in' he 
eight-foot-putt for 
op the pax-5 12th 
^osed but'fisrmjod 
worfoot bhdie just . 
: but heavy’ shower, 
galleiy scurrymg. 
r got a lot pf maka- 
,” he said, explain- 
piost ,'df his - shots 
•eri'fiad been on side 
15“to;20 feet from 
[he -longest be made: 
■■ 

;"th6se'.nusring the' 
\ PrantBeari-Bob' 
ber,.-': Lee 


backer- and Ray; B3hg will 
start the teft SEde^ . '• ’ . ■ 

“It ik gpibg .io be tough 
foe Buttle reading the of- 
fense;” says MKjhadls. “But 
you. have to decide where 
your Team ' is going at some 
point. You must ln«e' a. deci- 
sion for tee future.” 

Decisions yrilT belmd : this 
week. - Fourteen- Jets remain 
unable -(or unyaHiag, as in, 
Steve Davis’s case)' play J- 
So rookies such as BottIe, ar 
LQuIe Giainotmay. the small 
running- hack, -ai^ gefting a 
chance against tfe Giants- 
One who u returning- Pukkly 
from- sin fajury is Eff Qaligh-' 
ec, .defensive tackle. Hel will 


X .bui :PfeiJdte.^QHi^ W K > - *• 


X 
Al 

Wife 
Untt 
Lbs AOHles, 


KnKS-J-S, %»*■■* AnsW ' 

state, 196W; Z> vfaf c^ r 

Union, cltaml.no •JtaWv.I 
WOMEN’S TRACK EVENTS 


3, - Martta - ™ vr.-T-g 

4. Linda' Ordr. Brookhm, 


flSlMettf. Dash— L NadfM^viMjSwW 


raard^ Siili fcr ^ *' 5%, ^* 

Natalia, Setatow. Sc^ AWoiu BJtt. 


WOMEN’S FtEi.0 EVENTS 

’•ass 


^n^:Graham.;andj , play Monday .night; 




j: 






f- 


I - ‘ * 

•• V* 


-. -i 

^ADING SCOBES . ■ 
U 67— 13B 

’ . ..4dY;.70^1W 
. U.v- r. J . : .71 -,'66-r 


* -The Giants stilt Jhave not 
heard frOxn: Qgl ^Summereir,^ 


KSngs? point EleyenJ 

NameS'JFive Aides 

SpostM to jTSe Ifev.VuK Itoica 


5g- j^giB dga?ft!S 








v-=^. - - - . .-.-..*“*7 -footbafi,«oadi at the United 

tMd'fohiser^ de- 
f ensive -end,- -wfaose^ -tering 
was annodnoed cm r, Wednes- 


b 

tqt : some ctetijjBg? 



"i-.i. & .ti? 7] — 1. 







:• ROTer^ "(Ddtcb) ^ Ouderirirk, ; 

Edwffl-Gott^-iSje^oW,; T& zaftr xm, taheney. 
wot jBri tain’s fifstfwd medah ttzL- ~>CR 5 eiritete - ^xnd... -jP^ . 

-V - - 1»U. T.iA Enni rr -fhi Anh7 > 


‘.junior! Weese. Jack Spsri.g tfe only 
■ jSj SCT s^^mfegTaCd' aiytngTdiam^ asaStatftawi* ' ^ 

" ! •* - ■■ . to / an : upset*, .stafi^. of 



$itt lfa& boj^SCRkneter 
' o^l- |ri«fley, ■ ip ^J6-41 - « 
jihBtede hisfM&in the' 


G^bi’ge' ’PaternoV' the .^fosner 
poach.' r- - ; - . — ‘ ; - 


il'toTheXnr .YfiOsJrtmp 

ARDSV3Ii£r ? Ri 
"■ ’ — '‘ofiiFor- 
de- 

roion =ddfeated 
,ynri 61 !Edg'ewobd, 4 
f and --won her third 
j.Nmv Jersey -ama- 
4f championship to- 
-tiie .Somerset- Hills 
club, v,;-’ 

Ferity 'whcr.firBt won 
(rnament in" J972 and 
ionth captured the. 
s.Metropotitaji 54-bole 
fed' all ’ the 
frfcflgh todSy’S’ two- ; 
mal and finished sev- 
-par for the distance. 


d^atfsrayiead 
^^PiimKOEJV' of_ 
Briteute. C^tonsvabby ^wo- 
t^raS ' <rf‘ -a I’SBWoSr-'.frem 
T umano v, with: ^ths- pre-race 
favorite, Tiwiazr Wqlski of " 
Poland, third. ■ " . ; ; - . 


i^ris Gup Site Nanmd 
"BUDAPEST Aag. 

Ihei&tef of- the Davis' Ctp’s 


European. Zone„conte^ win L 
beeb^-.-m.^t^sL Soviet +• 


Geocgte Aag. 13 through. 15, 
the Honganan TbprijS Asso- 
riat iop announced today/ 


i'- 'High Tide$ Around .New York 


T. 

.-.Mm. 4, 

aub^Y. 

jS£ 

Ttt.rMk 
Fbf Msb 
Far MpB 


: StafrlWr' imiMs shli»ea)(ti.R»^a4' . *SL 

■ pajut ftml lohl •' -i'Mtf. .. Wfel 
KALyjA- AM. PJC.AJft.PJW. AJUL PJL JLMj 1 * 4 *. 
—(Si 6 tSD IDrSTESI IliSWfZ JiA fclT .*5 

Ins sawwBHhBB 

MtawvttatelM wkLhtm to*. 

XSW Ptul. dadact K grin. fan Sag Hak Bot 
IMO af JBOBS mtoiaEofawU. dKfea W BULfraa sandy Hook Mne. 


axncrx records; previous moot record. 
4:09 6. by Miss KezsnUna, 1975; previous 
jV-attMTc record, 4:07.3,- bv Cyndr Poor, 
San Jose, Calif., 1976): 3. Raisa Katy- 
-uJcpva, Soviet Union. 4 3. Francie 
Lanieu. Long Beach. Caiit.. .4:063;. 4., 
Crahr Poor, . Sap J°sa« 4:06-B- 
40MMar Relav— 1. Sovfet Union (Tatyana 
ProreAen&o, Ludmila Masiakcva, Nadezhcta 
Besfamilnaya, Vera _ Anlslmovz), ■ 0:43.93 
(Meet and American all-comers rtwrts; 
previous • meet record. 0: 0.4, b y Soviet 
Union. 1975; previous all-comets rocon, 
0-.44.C7, Oi west 6enmny .J?7S Ii 7. United 
Satw /Mutes .Watson, Debbie Smntgr. 
unde coidv.. Sta'il* Ingram), 0:44.56. 
High Jurnn— I, Galina Filatknn, Soviet 
• Union, 6 feet 3% Ihdte Imaet rawrd;: 
-previous record- 6-«i tar. Jon! Hmtfw, 
Untied States. 1975); 3, Tatyana Shlyidrlo, 
Soviet- Union. MBS: 3. Joni HunHey, Start- 
- dan, Ore.. 6-0 ; 4^ Paula Girven, Wood- 
bridge,. Vo* 60. ' 

Discuss Ttvow-3, ■ Aina Melnik, Soviet 
■Union, - 226 feet 10 inches- (Meet ard 
. American allcomers records; orsviotis meet 
record 219-11 by Miss M*ln!k. !9T3; weld, 
ous-atl-coriers record -21 7-d bv Mia Mel- 
nik. 197«): 2, Natalie Goriachev*, Soviet 
Onion, 2104;. 3, Jan. Swndsen, Sen Jose. 
UIH., >1594: 6. Jjmae Wi busier, Eusener 
Ora., 151-4. 

Shot-Put— 1, NWateda C3)taw, 5oylet Union, 
S9«S: i MelnLt -Smnet Untaa, 

5W; 3, Mgren Seidiw. Sarta Cm, ant, 
SI-416; 4. Kathy Dwtna, Sen Dttso,- *«. 


f. 



Ms.'ss^^aa 

temp, sit-™ 1 nn r m i 


r GBJMANSHB’HEBDPUPS • 

. 12 arts otd, sfred by.XUdo, Waj .Gar 



OCRMAN swteafrtd po latefs. arc. 
. pwijTO. grat house A homo dog. 



>sss 


. ••{914)70-4305 


, reg^taU. H50. 






-ftad 


Ml 


Ida 



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16 


THE N& W YORK TIMES. & hutWAY, AUGUST 7, 1976 


Crag’s CornerVictor in 



By MICHAEL STRAUSS 

special to Tif RW Yarfe Time* ' 

SARATOGA SPRINGS, 
N.Y., Aug. 6— There wa- a 
meeting “of the clan” m the 
winners’ circle of Saratoga 
Race Course today after 17- 
year-old Michael Walsh 3d 
triumphed in the 
first steeplechase 
• stakes of the New 

Race York season on a 

Tracks horse owned by 
his grandmother 
and trained by his grand- 
father. 

The occasion was the 
$22,100 Lovely Night Handi- 
cap, and its conclusion was 
followed by the gathering of 
more than a dozen cousins 
and other relatives of the 
Walsh family. „wall known 
for its devotion to steeple- 
chase racing. 

Crag’s Comer, racing in 


the green and white colors 
of Mrs. Michael G. Walsh, 
was the winner of the 2 1/16- 
mile race, beating Mis. Miles 
Valentine's 5-to-2 Deux Coup 
by I ! 4 lengths. Crag’s Comer 
returned $13.60 for $2 in 
providing his young rider 
with his first stakes victory. 

The handicap event drew 
seven starters and was one 
of the major attractions of 
National Steeplechase Day. 
Tonight; Joseph L. Aitchesoa, 
seven times a champion na- 


stantially surpassed similar 
dates last year. 

Today's nine-race program, 
which included two steeple- 
chase events, provided the 
prelude to a card tomorrow 
that will feature the $75,000 
added Whitney Handicap for 
thoroughbreds. Among the 
nine listed for the 1%-miIe 
Whitney are Ogden. Mills 
Phipps's Intrepid Hero, Sea 
High Stable’s Erwin Boy and 
Ho beau Farm’s Group Plan. 
Intrepid Hero is top 


tional steeplechase jockey, re- weighted with 120 pounds 
ceived the F. Ambrose Clark “ ’ 
award "for distinguished 
service to the sport” 

Business continued to be 
brisk, with a, crowd of 15,291 
despite rain in the early part 
of the program. It was the 
fifth time in five days since 
the 24-day meeting opened, 
that the attendance had sub- 


Today’s Entries at Saratoga 


Horses listed In order cf ucst positions 
Letter designates OTB listing 
FIRST— S7JOO, CI..3YO end on, 71. (chute). 

WT. JOCKEYS PR0B. 

ODDS 


• A-u-Rock Fight ...U3 Amy 

B-Dlcov .. 117 ConfenJr. 

i C-Mlsfer Breezy ."IDS J. E. Martin 

. D-GeneS Legacy .117 .. 

- ■t-Hi/odalm 113 R. Turcofle 

F-Opini oration ..-114 DelGuIdke 


3-1 

5-2 

5-1 

M 

M 

. .. _ 15-1 

G-oDmgp 117 Velasquez ... ... 3-1 

H-Tlrole Kins H7 Vciawue* 8-1 

J-DRtfll 113 Venezia 1C-I 

u— Counlet): Rode Fight and Dorasc. 


SIXTH — $25,000, Handicap. 3YO and uo. 
it [chute). 

A-Skv Commander lid Rodriguez 15-1 

Bki Piamem 112 Cordero Jr. d-l 

C Mike John G. 107 — : — *-.Jl 

D-B/d To Fame IM — — 20- 

E-u Due Diligence Hi Cordara Jr. ....4-1 

F-Sov Numero Uno 120 Day o-5 

G-Sunnv Clime 113 Velasquez 5-2 

iioupled Riant cm and Due Diligence 


SECOND — 58.500, cl., 3YO and UP, ft. 
A-Odds and Evens. 117 * 

8-Goad and Bold 
C-Seear Carrirr .. 

D-Mytwlnus ....' 

E-Jack Sarton ... 

F Rare Joel 

G-Comerda! Pilot 
H-Bi Bidder 12? 


117 

Amr 

. .10-1 

m 


6-1 

no 

Santiago 

.. 6-7 

106 

WhiHoy 

..15-1 

117 

E. Maple 

.. 4-1 

117 

Veiasauez 

3-1 

117 

Cordero Jr. . . 

.. 4-1 

122 

Vene:)a 

.. 5-1 


TH I RD— s'3 JfflO, d., 3YO and w, Him. 

A-Aerodrome .... 115 Venezia 5-1 

B-Proud Romeo . 1 17 Baeza 5-1 

C-ltnJght of Honor 117 P. Tureotte S-2 

D-Sea Ice 112 Prener 8-1 1 

E-Soccer II 117 Buslines 5-t| 

F-Our Reward 1 17 Cordero Jr. 4 

G-To The Tune . .117 


SEVENTH— 512^00, allow.. 3 YO 
1 1/16 (turij. 

and up. 


12? 


....15-1 


114 

Girstlnss .. 



114 

Vrtasouez .. 

1 S-l 


12? 

Cordero Jr. 



114 

Velasquez .. 

.... 4-1 


119 

Baeza 



122 

Cruauef — 



114 

Cniguet ... 



114 

■Amy 





, B-? 


119 

R. Turcotte 

. ^1 


114 





114 

Gustmes ... 



714 

, , 



Vbove All and Easv Gallon 1 

vourted Capu/cte Song and Jeopardy. 1 


EIGHTH— 275,000 addod. The Whitney 


108 Velez 
H2 Velasquez . 
112 Gasttnes . . . 
120 Contene Jr. 
11& PJvora 


SSioto Handicap, 3YO and up, ltam. . 

— - — 5— — A-Qmnlry Mon'rch II J Prosper HEJ 

FOURTH — 59,500, cl., 3YO and up, if. Denaris Gun 

A-Siuppy Chatter .117 Anrv 1* I|l-Cvpuo Plan 

BJ3oldatPamW .1IJ P. Tur.OttO 10-1 Q Haldwt HUn 

C-Natlve Blmd .119 Roane E-intrepi d Hem 

D-V/alchaLutvStar H7 Da* 20- ' I f-uej pvtlrro .._ 

E-cAII Our Hopes .l>5 Venezia 4-1 G^SW/aius 109 Croguet 15-1 

F-Jumbclala 117 Cnauet 15-1 H-Erwin Bay 116 R. Turcatte 4-1 

Fun .. .-113 Ccrtero Jr. £- uwcnHMiy 109 Day «■! 

H-lTmbrcfta Man - 1D3 J. E. Aterfln ... . >1 , u-^ii/picd Dan cinq Gvn and El Pitlrra. 
J-Judptuttc 117 Bam 

U$wtt&-^Alf ’ Oor HoeSf 'and 'Bugllbonrl ' j , 3Y ° and ^ 


and is the overnight favorite. 
But he is in a field that in- 
cludes six other stakes win- 
ners . and he will be running 
on dirt for the first time this 
year. .■ 

Each’ of Intrepid Hero’s 
four races this year has 
been on grass, one ending is 
victory. Last season he won 
three races on turf — a divi- 
sion of the Boardwalk, the 
Hollywood Derby and the 
Secretariat— and he was sec- 
ond in the Hawthorne Derby 
and the Monmouth ‘ Invita- 
tion. 

Included in his opposition 
is Erwin Boy, one of threel 
co-second choices in the 
early line. Erwin Boy has 
won all six of his races this 
year — on grass* — incl uding 
the Edgemere, the Bowling 
Green and TidaL 


'N Be Lucky, Best Bee and 

Appassionato. 

At Yonkers . . . 

Bill Popfinger goes for bis 
1 , 000 th victory tonight when 
he drives Shirley’s Beau in 
fiie $25,000 Tarrylown for 
pacers. The 39-year-old Pop- 
finger won his first race in 

Shirley’s Beau, who has 
earnings of $150,694 -this 
year, is 7-2 in the morning 
line. Rambling Willie, to be 
driven by Bob Farrington, is 
the 3-1 favorite. 

Monmouth Entries 

Hones IA - «i m order or past positions 
Sy Toe associated Press 

Pi RST— 67,500, onto. 2YO, Star. 

Prott. 


Odds 

Catty W'rapus 118 4-1 
PlarThePTce US 10-1 
Belles Bro 118 S-l 
Casty 11820-1 

a- Proton 118 3-1 

Narob 11812-1 

WMlBniiKfcie 11810-1 
Telly Hill IISIO-I . 
a-Couplad. b-CoupieJ. 


Prod. 
■ Odds 
Sh'mrcdcSam 11S20-I 
Wry Mr Love 115 15-1 
b-N'temArrvl IIS 2-1 
Alicia Luck 115)0-1 
Shady Joe 11120-1 
Loveni 1 18 7-2 
a-Tam'5 Land 115 5-1 

OCool rtmnt 118 2-1 


SECOND — S5M0. ct, 3YO and up, 7f. 
Vernie 1 14 31-1 , B-Sw’t Sassy *107 12-? 


Curious Kim. 114 4-1 
White Blaze *112 3-1 
SaHotrosft; 117 7-2 
T'st The Fare 114 5-2 


Sqwd Girl . 
Native Touch 
Sonercare 


112 15-1 
117 0-1 
114 B-l 


Baeza 

Delouldlce 


Kelley 


Cordero }r. . 

R YiMdlKUSO 
VpI«Oih!z . . . 
Ca-S'jc! 

T jrr.lte !" 


....20-1 
.... 4-1 
.... 4-1 

P-u Windhover 119 Velasquez 3-1 

E-Ncirth Of Town 114 Baeza 6-1 

F-Nctaoly Dltt'r'nt 114 Amy 6-1 

G-Most R^lJblc 1 14 R. Turcotte 15-1 

H-F'"iiser Painls 114 Cruauct 15-1 

l-Fully AccredlKd 1 14 Gustmcs 20-1 


a-Bib Basil 114 Venezia 

• 10-1 • B-Snlllary .Will 114 

■ .15-j IC-ExrifhveDTrd 114 Day 

^ 15-1 
. 10 l 
. tB-i 
..15-1 
. 20. 1 
.. ?-l 
.. 4-1 
. 10-1 

I lli" 


J-Heliotesist 
K- Federation 
L-rerraus 
.‘.1-Trail Signs 
.N-PMUsey Bull 
• [O-Eauatian 
,5‘) 1 P-Hanescitie Tod 
•!f pO-u Baker 


114 

114 

IU 

119 

114 


Veiasauez 15-1 

R. '.VooOtuHHe . .20-1 

Centers Jr. ...JO-1 

C0-1 

Santiago 15-1 


FIFTH— 89,000. 2YQ, mins.. 61 
A-Jottn AJden ... 122 Gusttnes . 

B-PaHu 122 

-C-Dn rjisand Fite 122 

0- L Eoauwitoil "It? 

E-uA Tamilv Fighf II? 

F-Ccmmon Stack .*117 

G-Cnras Rip . ... 112 

H-Gun Blast "115 Jaccir.a 

1 - -.Gallant Way . IT? 

J-Fieef Beax ...17: 

K-lcrri Bradfc-rt ..IK 
Ll’Ante rlcr;- .. . 122 
M-Gui-i Ans/.Tr ..I — 

N-.Crolse On In . 123 
O-Man Fur. .. . . 137 

P.-jCariasrt ...??' ., 

Q-'.'.'a-/ Enc-jsh 1 T 

u— Cr-ialei’ Family Flshr an-j 

v— Ccuclri: Gallant Way anJ Cruise Gn In. ■Aaorenlke aliwance claimed. 

Yesterday’s Results at Saratoga 

By Asad 

FIP3T— SS2K30, el , mdn., 3Y0 anC up, 6r.i 

Upheld (G'Atinesi 5.60 3 M 2.cfll 

Eu's Reas-Jn iCruguet) ... 4.00 2.80 1 

Final Offer [Whiitey) ... . 4.40; 

.Time — 1:11 1-5. Scraiched — Inccrrljanle. ; 


I1J- Peinuidioe '....-..10-1 

112* Whilley 15-1 

114 Veiasauez 3-1 


• :*u*u car.w 

C-rtte-t 1 q-'7ucltd Windhover and Bakor 


By AssodaM Fress 

FIP3T— SS2K30, cl, mdu., 3Y0 and up, 6r.i OTB payoffs: (El 19.20 8J0 5.60; (B) 

Upheld (Gostinesi 5.60 3 70 2.t0l7J» *M: «J1 7.40. Exada CE-B) paid SI15J0. 

SIXTH— S20. COO aftoed, 4Y0 and up, ?im. 
Tin Lovely Night Steeplediese. 

orapa^ (D, wi-md tEi-ojui^^^a ,3 :“ ?:so 
m. «. l C Vf™>». r . 

Shar/i IMarhni 14.20 8 30 3.20 


Jerry* 1 Mona .. (Tuitotte) 


Joyous Pteasuro (VelasqoezJ 


5.40 

6.JO 

3.60 

The 


fF) 

paw 


5.80 3.S0 

low— 1:12. iBB 

Double (5-71 paid M3. 00. 

OTB payoffs: (G1 13.40 7.60 109: (FI 

5*140, (C) 2 j 60. Double (D-G) paid 

5 *THIRD— $8^00, d., mdn., ?YO, Staf. 
Maria's Baby — {Marians) B.40 5. DO 
Wanton Woman... (Turcnttcl 12.03 
Spontaneous . . (VelasouezJ ... . . 

Time— 1:05 1-5. Scralched-Asfc For 
Moon. 

Exada (2-5) paid S202A0. 

■OTB payoffs: (B) 7.80 4.60 5.00; 

TUO 6.00; (G) 3M. Exada (ELF) 
$192.40. 

FOURTH — 5104R10, allow., 4YO and w, 
Sim. (Steeplechase). 

e-Tan Jay (Sklfflngton) 5.00 3.40 2.60 

Amador (Star*) ... 6.60 4J)0 

Srittin Image (Flshhadi) 3.20 

Time— 3:44 2/5. Mratehed— Breaking Dawn. 
, OTB payoffs: (R AM. 3J0, Z40; (G) 
6.20, U0; (D) 3.-00. 

FIFTH— $1 UM0, allow., 3Y0 and up, lAm. 

(turfl. 

Mum's The Word (Turcnltet 20.40 8.80 6.00 

Crown Treasure (Day) ... 7.40 4.80 

Miss Nilinsky . . . (Gustlm) 8 JO 

Time— 1 :43. Scratched — K.rtctile's Girt, 
Danish View, Miss Prism. 

Exacts (52) paid $121.89. 


Time— 3:49. Scratched— Clover Over. 

OTB payoffs: (B) 12 JO 7.00 4.40; (G) 
4JM Z60: (E) 4_20. 

5EVEHTH — SlOJUO^alUnv., 2YO, 6T. 

Nearly On Time .... (Day) M.4S 10.00 5.«0 

Super Jo» (Baeza) ... 4.80 4.00 

Peek Top (Hernandez) 6.00 

Time— 1:11 3/5. 

Exada (25i paid 2100.20. 

OTB payoffs: IB) 26 JO. 9.40, SJ0; (E) 
4.40, 3JO, (Cl 5.601 Exk» (B-E) Paid 
$95. 

EIGHTH— 525,000 ho., 3YO and up, I*m. 
(him. 

Gloving Tribute (Day) ’4.40 3J0 2.80 

Asscmhl/weman .(Gustines) ... 4.(0 3.60 

5ugar Plum Time .(Cordero) 3.20 

Time — 1:41 T/5. 

OTB uaraffs; (H) AM. 3.00, 260; (E > 
3J0, 3.40; 1C) 3.00- 
NINTH— 56,000, d., 3YD and up, 7f. 

Immoderate (Baeza) 7.20 4.60 3 JO 

Cardinal George .. (Cordero 1- 5J!0 4J0 

Blade Of iron ....(Whilley) 6.0} 

Time— 1:24 2/5. 

Trlole: (3-1-j) paid $173.00. 

OTB Payoffs: (Cl 6J0. 4J3), 2J0; (A) 
4J0, UO; IB) 5.60. Triple (C-A-B) paid 
S164J20. 

Attendance,. 15. 291. 

Handle. Ct-531^22. 

OTB handle. S2J79J16. 

Weather Showery, track Arm. 


Mike Walsh 3d’s victory in 
the steeplechase followed a 
switch in mounts. Originally, 
he was listed to ride his 
aunt's 7 - year - old gelding, 

■ Clover Over. But when that 
horse became a late seratch, 
his grandfather, who trains 
both horses, had him put on 
Crag’s Comer.. 

The young jockey was 
asked which of the two 
horses he felt was faster. His 
answer was one designed to 
keep the Walsh dan in har- 
mony: 

“I think they're both equally 
fast” 

At Monmouth . . . 

Honest Pleasure and Fool- 
ish Pleasure can make it a 
profitable weekend for their 1 
trainer. LeRoy Jolley, and 
their respective owners, Ber- 
tram R. Firestone and John 
L. Greer. 

Honest Pleasure goes to- 
day in the $100,000 Mon- 
mouth Invitation Handicap for 
3-year-olds. Foolish Pleasure, 
a 4-year-old, will run in the 
$125,000 Arlington Golden - i 
Invitation Handicap at Ar- 
lington Park near Chicago. 

Honest Pleasure will 
carry top weight of 126 
pounds in a field of 10 for 
the 1%-raile Monmouth. Next 
in line is Majestic Light at 
122. Zen carries 118 and 
Joachim 1 17. Rounding out the 
field are Wardlaw, On The 
Sly, American Trader, Dream 


TH I RD— $7,500, -cl., 3YO and UA, 6f. 


4-Run To GrymilM 
EftnfB 116(5-1 
Gala Warrior 116* Cr\ 
Sir RJpper 1)6 4-1 
b-Cr'msnTw'n 113 10-1 
■•Bold WifKf 116 10-1. 
a-Coupled. b-Couoled. 


Clancnrr 
Far Frank 
Bold Scln 
Dcr’I Deter 
b-Pembles 


1% 5-2 
116 3-1 

113 12-1 

114 15-1 

115 10-1 


FOURTH — $7,500. CL - . 3YO and UP, lAm. 
uHal-wd Hill -114 3r\ i Osk Cterk 114 8-1 
Coral Sunset 115 5-2 ( Detrm'nd Cra 1)510-1 
KldaraNavy 119 3-, I Step Moan 119 6-1 
Farm Boy 115 6-1 I UttteSTrg'n *10812-1 


FIFTH— 58^)00 allow., 2 VO. 5Vjf. 

Tacitus 117 12-1 | W-snfl Hl'dy "112 20-1 
SamChlHon 117 5-2 Ever Bdd 11710-1 
Eapl'S Raw'rd 117 10-1 Wln'r Of Two II7 1B-I 
First Ambs'dr 117 2-1 I Hpapy Fleet 117 3-1 




Old' New York ] 
in Springold Che 

By ALAN TRUSCOTT “ 



SIXTH— 5U00V cf., 3YO and up, it. 


a-TutforSpaok 118 7-2 
Fertera? 115 3-1 
Low Hit 122 3-1 
EssgySttwf 117 6-1 
a-Raold RtAt 119 7-J 
a-Coupled. 


Frecd'mTraia 113 B-l 
Unde Baby M2 12-1 
Ad Bcorbon 115 4-1 

Head Man- 175 S-l 

Pilot's Son 115-4-1 


SEVENTH— S1I.0C0, allow., 3Y0 and up, 
1m. (fnrfl; 

Special Love *H5 3-1 ThrlHofllall T1 8-1 
Picture Tube 117 8-1 Lav Prafesor's 113 20-1 
KnocLiomzna 111 7-2 Total OM> 113 8-1 

Loony's Em) III 12-1 Promira Us 176 6-1 

Prow Cf You ill 41 I 


EIGHTH— $1304)00, .3YO, Itam. 

Ttm Moomotb Handicap 


Wardlaw US 17-1 

Or. The Sly 115 15-1 

Majestic Light 122 3-1 
Honcjf P'sure 126 2-1 
DM 'NBLefcy 1131?- 1 


Zen 
A6Misiona*j 
Jcechlm 
Amer. Tradr 
Best Fee 


United Pres lotarnatfeoal . 

IT’S BETTER WTIH EYES OPEN: Mark Wroddage, 8, has . 
yet to leant one of the bask: requirements for mark s- 
mans hip— watch what you’re doing- — ashe tries Ms hand 
at a how during national ar che ry meet in Valley Forge, 
Pa. His coach, Luann Ryon, won gold medal at Olympics. 

Yonkers Raceway Results 

(OTB payoffs cabled to 5% state tax). 

. FIRST— S5 JIM, pan, mile. ! THIRD-STJOB. wee. mite. _ ^ ^ . 

, ,!r— Come On AJng (Ahbario) -&40 3JO 2.60 : 6— Ambrosj .... [Gasman) 7 .Of i^O U0, 
IIS ,r!l4— Boniour Brisv (Taldaan) ... 3iO 2.60'5— Taylzr Loboll .(Prsanol ... A.20 3J0 

'^^•J l— Rowan La»s (Pcsfinger) 3JB S— Par WC: ......rialrtnan) ... 3^0 

JiiSS'jl OTB letter*— B. D. A_ Time-iO 2/3-1 OTB tetter*-?. E. H. Tlnte— 2:(W. Shantes 
nic [Suor-ng Stone. Rompfn Yvonne. ShxSJnat' Pride, Carizya Jaoc, Sclda), Don Jaso and 
HuJ a a lvmbre P.lople and Undrs Child -also started. Brave a^o started. ■ - ' 

Ic-m. | „ . Vs Mo Mate; fA ffd/zs te, T 2 ylor Cobell 

. . [ ScCONO— S7.0P, oace, utile- w* q&s) 

115 4-1 17— Ocuble Finesse (Hghta) 3.60 ItO WD® ^ ^ 


N'NTH — ifJBXf, 0., 3:0 and uo, 

(tarn. 

Brambles Boy 111 1C-1 
VeroB. 114 8 1 
Brre Lc Chate 1(0 6-1 
Donard 115 6-1 

[teftav'g Don 1I7 2G-I. ... _„_ 5 — 

Lisa Doo 113 13-1 ; a-ft«5P4dabte 111 3-il8n.sh and Al'^ln Pirate also started. 

a-Couoted. [ Daily Double (Coma Da Along 

*AporenUceallo'Jranced2iire5. Dzubie Finesse; peld S 18.30. 

I 


Cor. Neddy ii5 8-i i5— Simmons Hnvr (At£al)h>) ... 5.00 2.30! FOURTH— SZflGO, raze, mHe. ' 

a^kilrUHIIteiy lie 3-1 4— B rote Fame .. .(Tallman) 3^0.3— Bln (RAflanzi) 29.40 11.00 5-M 

S il? |& OTB letters— H, E. G. Tlme-2:03 2,*5L 5-y:aiow M. CJ.Ta)!i=a=) ... 5^1 3^! 

Cinudtro’k 115 4-1. Little Time Little, Berra Hancw, Looey 4— SasttaeJ — lKaa.RI-ra* 2.ED 

'073 tetters— C, E. D. Tiate-2:0S. P^tv 

arri.'Gcza, Frasty*s First. IrCal, Tony Dee and 
Ri'J alsa started. 

I Ejocte (Becamtra Bin and Stedov Mi- 
I Utelle) oald 5KS.5D. 

I FiFTr* — 5UXCC0, ;13, rr. 

!2— Mer.ia.te .... (tf-Uokwl 423 2.50 VM 
;i—°as^tnn .- (J-Caoma*:) ... 3.40 .2^0 
1 5— Bis Azs (J. Crj’ss J-.) ... . 3.21 


Tonighfs Entries at Yonkers 


Horses listed <n orozr of Post oesilions 

Utter desisnate* OTB listing , , 

FIRST-Si^OO, os«. Ca» C-2, mile._ . . FIFTH-W,750, Care Preo 2d Die.. »«. i teFffiTTSwrt Qm^W'nSi 

. . jlrntz AS=s ani Dream /Aikzr also started, i 
I S-rarta t Mandate and Pastebyrd) aaidi 
516.30. 


Lauda Is Improving. 

MANNHEIM, West Ger- 
many, Aug. 6 (AP) — The 
condition of Niki Lauda of 
Austria, the world champion 
race driver, improved to the 
extent Friday that doctors 
were contemplating his 
^transfer to a hospital in near- 
by Ludwigshafen, doctors 
said today. Lauda, who re- 
ceived near faital injuries in 
the German Grand Prix Sun- 
day in a flaming three -car 
prleup, will be moved there 
ou Monday. ' 


A— Yanlce Miracle f"H. H^-vcyt . 
B— Earts Blue Chin i*P. H..uqMon5 

C— fair Josty (*C Abbil-'eMol. .. 
D— Slacl.ed Call (*H. ril'Or.) 

E— Marmart Kerry (G. SkolW... 
F— Truhaopy Rainbow CD. fns?zi 
G— Tarry Hccte CM. Dci-yyi 
H— Practiiso CF. Tagarieiiai 
II— Farmstead Sophie I 


Prob. ■ mile. 

Odds A— Committeeman CE. Davis) 

3-1 1 B— Laura'S Sfisper (*j. Patterscn S-.)... '3-l! 

g.i C^-Cieutf Caver (G. Shzlhr) 6-1 : 

"• “.P-Alajcstic 5kiSMT CM. DsVev) 6-1! SIXTH— S11X5V r; re. n-te. 

' I Wner CP Hauihttml.... 5-2 lijade:.- IHF.nl 4 

.... S-i • F-Pegasu* USsli CC AbSatieiloi S-I -4— Ragr.T-e J . ..(«. Dz!*») 

. . . 4-1 . G-Driven In f«L VVbPles) M !s— Izster.t Tar (S. Ha-.'icr 1 

...10-H SIXTH-SI 1.0CC, pace. Class A-3/B-1. icis.; CTB Ufierj — A, D, E. Tlme-J:M 1/5. 

-a— M r. Sandman cC Abbatlellol *.||LiWvs Phil, itoct Jce. '..Irterop Lstedi. 

ieiioi . ..i(M B— Broa-m-ay Bre! (*W. Bresnaban) J-i,Reiel itoip “err./ Lsheil aisa.^ne- 

■VV Piuihitn) — -C — Ro/al Asror N IH. Fillon) 5-1! =*azte rTrrc.y Hereon sad Haclim-j J) 

■ jD-fttemles Lad (-J: Cruisei. .. .? M jaMB S47JD. 


3 JO 143 
5.03 3 83 
2.63 


SECOND— SM00. pace, cl miie lc— Tnrpfr Chb CP. HaugMon) 3-1 

aJS^hSSd . lini . ... itW THURSDAY NIGHT 

ft^tounfcattfti (*C. Aiba: e!'?i 3-) iH^Parin< ^ii/i'r i*y rv^ovi ”” ili I SEVrKT? 1 — 5S.0W. wet, mde ■ 

C-Jwiartran Hanover C-j. Tillnuni... -.10-1 \ ■ - - — =S2 W TiS 5^0 23* 

i! rnf /cN ™ -C 7 ' 5 ° C ' Ctess ^' Itae-JIn (J. Tallmsn) ... AM 3J» 

E — Sierlln Clav CM. Davolaisei 3-1 mile. Knibh ca n-xn) 3 oo 

Brave CIV. Bresnaban l S-l [A-Sarwra Lil CD. ' e ,/-Daura i.il dikftj . a.w 


F— Steady Brave CIV. Bresnaban i. 


D— Detenu in*” Kllkao' CM. ‘DfAeV)"".’^ i iS-Annro;' s Cream ("j^Faraidoj ft 

H— Moroahan CL Fontaine) s-l JC-MWtaatemu* loe CG.Phaien) 6-1 ij'® 3 *' Gart h,, foo d Yail*e r Ataeil, and 

)l — Tuttl Frultl (*R Daigrtcaullj — -D— Truron Hanover CW. Bnsiaban) B-l M™? ta ta lira started . 

J— Carbon County (*G. Daise/I _ E-Seatraln HJlMilW.... 3 - 1 1 Th» Triple (Fannstad Jack, Howl# Maim 

■ — F— Adrl.vei5S Ralnhcw CL Fontaine)... S-I i«ud Dakota) paid $111-93.. 

THIRD— S10,000. pace, d., mile. f?l EIGHTH — SIO^OO, Pace, mile. 

A-High Hope Lyss CH. Film) 7-2 n=T lyllW F”*- 1 * Dctwl 'S-Ate Rmeo Wvriy rTallmnl 6 20 4.60 3.40 

B-Mirade Jody CC Abbaticllo) 3- 1 EIGHTH-S25J100. Pao, Summer Series! 1-Besta Fella . ..(Fwtelnel ... AM 

C— Joantes Romeo CP. Aopeii 6-1 FFA. mile. !/— CrICnTreveric IS. Maria) 4.40 

rdin's Ekbtpss CV. Dauplaisel t-1 -A— Golden Fuila (*H. Fillon) 4-j i cM. aaani 4.a3 3 

. _ it's Honor ("T. Taylirl 7-2 1 B — Stilrlpr's Beau CW. Popflrmr) 7-2 1 qtr E.-JL G Time— 2- 01 ‘ Kens 

F-Capteln Van Cj. Tallman) t .j ;C-Rambling Willie CR. Farrineten) .... 3-1 ShadM BwWn V »S 

G— Knight Time Joe r-R. Vilrano) 20-1 'D-Handle With Care CP. Haughtw) . .. S-lly^S^ mTiso 

K— Brandon (-D. insLoi - 15-1 .E-Nicka warn pus Leroy (G. Phalen) S, ■ 

tl— Sudden Sam CN. DaoSraise) — |F— Tarsort Hap CD. losko) 7-Zl NINTH— SS'.OBl, nee, jni'e. . 

IJ— I Leanldes CF. Ponfirwr; — | K . NTH ... cm — IZL J =: r “ Que V'oro IR. Crmteri I! JO 5 00 X 

A— FanSdic '& Tl ^ ** ^ J '- C 


« 


FOURTH— S43.750, Cane Proa, 1st 
pace, mil?. 

A— Richmond CK. McNutt) 

6 — Shadow Don Time CC. Abbaliello) 

C— Raven Hanover iG. Sholrr) 

D— Pensive Brel (G. Phalen). 


Dl¥ -’ Nldavrampu* Den' CO. Insfcs). . 

. C— Tarrwtt CC-. Alaraun) 

. 5-2 * D— U. Col Joe CC. Abbattetta).. 

. 6-1 E— Placid Wav 

• 7-2 ]F— Super BmIIp 

3-1 G-Actlve Boy (»L Fontaine! 6-1 


, . Rariu Marvel TR TVcnitr . 

• S;, I i’-A.-me-J Yankee jc Aa : io) SM 

' 6-1 '3TB Letters - B. C. G. 7ime-2:01 1/5. 
4-1 Joroses R Returnee, Shaney. Hasty 


E— Skipper Chance (M. Metcalfe) 40-1 'H-Pierre Sahbra CG. Precino) 

F-Beautron Hanouer (*K. Waplrsl. .. 5-1 ;}l-C-iobal UgW CM. Dokey). ... 

G— Speedy Romm <P. Haughlon) 5-1 ‘Modified suibv. tAlso eligible. 


Wav CR. f.Vinji 5r.) 6-j!0« n ^T »"<S Rentes Sor a:» sterted. 

leetle CAV DoNv) 5-1 B ' 9 Tr,ple 006 V*ra, Racine Marwl 

Bor CL FonfalneJ 8-1 and Armed Y3nte#) paid S74220. 


12-1 


Attendance— 14.S5T. 
OTB— S877,«S. . 
Handle-51 ,867,895. 


^cdalxoTtuXncVwkTtea- 

SAtTLAKE CITY, Aug. 6 
—Two old New York rivals 
clashed in the Spingold 
knockout team champkmship' 
at the I American Contract 
-Bridge^ League’s Summer Na- . 
tionals here this afternoon. 

Chi one side was Sam Stay- 
man, Originator (rf a world- 
famous conventioh, teamed ‘ 
with three other New York 
experts, -Matt Granovetter, 
George Tornay aud Neil sa- 
verman, together with Bob 
Lipsitz d[ Potomac, Md. 

On the other was Edgar 
Kaplan, editor of The Bridge 
World, teamed with Ron 
Rubin aud" Michael Becker, 
both of New York; and Nor- 
man Kay of Philadelphia and 
Richard $avlicek of Fort 
Lauderdale, Fla., undo- the. 
captaincy of Bill Root of 
Boca Rafim, Fla. 

After 32 deeds, one-half of 
the match , Stayman’s team 
led by two mtenmrional. match 
points. * . 

In another key match, a 
team led by Vic Mitchell of 
New. York led by four points 
agai n s t a group including 
Peter Weichsel and Alan Son- 
tag of New York. 

Other Scores 

In other j>ai rings, John Fe- 
jervary of Phlo Alto, Calif ., 
trailed Art Wal dmann of 
Middletown, Conn,- by 26 
points; Michael Moss' or New 
York trailed Peter Pender of 
San FTancisco by one; Mal- 
colm Brachman of Dallas led 
Ron Feldman of Livermore, 
Calif., by IS; Curtis Smith of 
Pacific ' Palisades, • Calif., 
trailed George Rapee of New 
York hy 25; Kathie- Wei of 
New York led the Aces by 4. 
and George Rosenkranz of 
Mexico City led Clifford Rus- 
sell of Miami Beach by 23. 

Almost all the . top-ranked 
teams survived their third- 
round matches yesterday. 
One exception was the eight- 
seeded team headed by Bud 
Reinhold of Miami, who lost 
by 64 points to the Moss 
team,- which .includes Paul 
Heitner of Hartsdale, W.Y. 

Another exceptjon was a 
foursome led by Lew Mathe 
of Los Angeles, seeded 11th. 
They lost to the Mitchell . •. 
team by the same large mar- 
gin of 64 points, thanks in ; 
part to the diagrammed deal. ! 

At both tables. Easttppened ( 
four hearts, and in each case j 
South ventured four spades, 
which West was happy to 
double. Both West players 
led the heart queen, and both 
East players overtook and re- 
turned the jack. In each case. 
South ruffod low and was 
overruffed by West, who re- 


NO 

:• - A: 

. :."Sr 

o 

- A vA' 

WEST ' - 
4 ‘Q 108 2 . 
-V Q 
O KJ4 
v KS653 . 

■ - SO 

' V 
o 

♦ 

North and 
nerabie. The 
East South 
4 C? 4 '* 
Pass Pass 
West fed.t 

turned a clut 
The decla: 
compaj^, wj 
ferent re 
Mitchell’s t 
defending, S 
from durum 
disaster. Ea< 
queen and - 
heart, again 
overruffed...' 

When w 
dub, South' 
by playing 
dummy, and 
played anm 
promoted th 
the fourth tr 
defense. So 
diamond, bt 
to lose a d 
down four. 

. Mitchell 
three trick . 
900 points, 
.that East’s 
heart- jack 
trick was i 
signal cabin 
could hard] 
club, since 
turn thel .k 
trick. - 
So Mitche 
ace immprii 
the queen. ' 
file ace-lda| 
led the .chit 
helpless) for 
dhb- kmg h 
played and 
away a m5u. 
if he .refos 
would neve 
trick. , 


WZ--M 

' r - ,??- ‘-TBSfrl' •W'.'IVW 

•••■ mm 


-, .^5- 

; .. , x. 



w ? .-_ 


■i *.G' 


"< -»y . . 


'■ MED 
MI 

held by 1 
f 

FESTIV 

Monday 

prompt/ 

Banc 

Camegif 

345 Cm -U. 


OVER 1,000,000 B0 

SECOND HAND AND OUT-OF-PR ’ 
SCHOLARS. COLLECTORS AND F 

. THOUSANDS OF REVIEWERS' 1 

SPECIAL: OF NEW 1976 BOOKS AT J4PF 


. *.-*?*■ 



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•S' 

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AST BOOKS: 


HUGE DISPLAY 
AT GREATLY REDUCED F 




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OX 5-3311 




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rv^ ho®- 

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2nd AY. (67 SU 249-670(71 
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1965 JEROME, BX.731-57DOJ 


ForSJe 3702 

BUKDC 76 Wagon $6495 
9pa«.Estotesl radcHUno mJ. 

Grand Bu^ 212-739-8741 


CADILLAC 74 LIMO 
duel controls, loaded. GEM. 

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3782 


Caddy Convertible 

1976 ELDORADO 
TRUCKED FROM CALIF. 

Fuel Infected! ills one ofttie nation's 
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Every Option-Under $20,000 

Atlanta. Georgia (404)261-8037 


CADILLAC ELDORADO 
NEW 76 CONVERTIBLE 
Silver, buck fas, slhw leather inter. Rill 
Cadllac equipment graios plus other tea- 
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CAD71 FLEETWOOD LIMO 

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noneof nmv eomppefl loam can si tub 

SAM'S LIMOUSINES 

(212)244-9067 


Cod Eldorado eonv 74 Me 

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CAD ELOCRADOTl-VERYGOOD! 
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6 wav seats, ara/fm radios alt power! Tltf 
whwl.SZrjobzi2S95-6t89 


CADILLAC EIDORADO 1974 


CAD 72 Fleetwood Brougham 

37J100 raf. J^oelhjund. $3000. 


Cad Sedan de Vilfe '70 


CADILLAC ELDORADO 76 Convert 


447-3400CM: 


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CADIL1AC 73 Bdorado Conv 

loaded. CJlIaff 7, 91693946th 


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CADILLAC 1976. Eldorado Onvtrttete. 
I. Call: 

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CHEVROLET NOVA 19684 dr sedan, p/s. 
p/b, 6 cyl Te utP trins. Rxcef-runnfro cond, 
dd tires. $a& 212-941-0541 


CHEVY MONTE CARLO 75-FB, PS. as- 


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FOR THE LOWEST ««CE 

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WOIF MANHATTAN 

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FtrSafc 3702 

CHEVROLET IMPALA 73 






UNCOLN MARK IH 1969 

very good eon±l^^Asklng *1750. 








Cowart Cus-PoweshC 3704 

PODGE OAHT 1968, 4 IT, 6. cyt, auto Irattt. 
PS. AM radio. oftepgraer.s^OSwafi 


ftstmoUesYMed 


3766 


3796 


Cats Wanted 

WE BUY ANY MAKE, YEAR 

AMERICAN FOREIGN 8 SPORTS CARS 

■ ova BOOK PRICES PAID 
Mercedes, Jaguars, Porsches 
Monte Carlos, Olds/onfiocs 
compacts, Cadillacs, Lincolns 
SAVE HUNDREDS OF $$ 


Embassy Auto Sales 

247-6887 

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2000 CARS 


NEH) CARS FOR EXPORT 
1964’s to 1976s 
Pay Premium Prices 

srazuimM 

435-3800 

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Statai Wagons &fi*ses 


3708 





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k llhr Int. W/roof rede 3 sxt 


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CHEVY VANS-73&74 


Top Cash 

We Buy Everything 

WE PAY ALL LIENS 
PIUS GIVE YOU CASH 
GM Cor Corp 212-731-4300 

17*5 Jerome Ave.aronx 


Wep^taM^Mrtean , low ml 

! sell tr trade. Call 

57&BdRYNYC 


DODGE 74 CORONET 

sfaHon mn. 6 jra, roof radc Small VB sy 

(rteeslaa iww. wlMWv»rw«i. Garan 
kapt. Must be seen tube spree leted.Exra 
pa Wlleam. CL&50. 7S9-5B 


FORD TORINO 1968 Wagon 

Chranw rack, tuta transi Am-tm stereo r 
dlo; feefy air, dean. $750 2SS-ff64 


Statioo Wagons & Bases 


3708 


PLYMOUTH '73 SATELLITE 

slation ww. 6 pass, fully powered, lute, 
small VU-ern. it MO orlg ml. .One owner. 
SJicwrro cond. Looks 8 ririVM Hof new. Prt- 
vatdv owned. Must sell. S2.T75. 75M423 


tapvtsd & Sport* Can 


3720 


BMW7T 1800 CS 

MINT CONDITION! 


VW 74 7 PASS WAGON 

Auto, 16,000 mi SK95 212-TT5-1144 


Astipe o4 Qsssic Can 


3712 


Buick SpeaaJ4dr 1965 

28*100 ml, nsa 663-0162 


irJOOtf LJrcYTuJrT CTiyTTlf- 




CHEVY '57 eula. 
snowron cond. RAlt 
84 Set-Sun 212-HA 6- 


7 «tTL 


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DODGE 1940 I ton pJckup lire raptne. 
Front end pumper. 90% restored. 516- 
623-4410; 546-TgTV 


FORD Cnv w/RumbJe .-37 

l rnl, 5 d run eand, imist sell teb 
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Maroon/tan Iter 



BMW I 

SiriSiSf 


BMW74 BavoTjpn-Like New 


BMW 2002111. 1974 


BR1CKUN 74 white, exert cond, */& am/ 
' stereo, R/s.>5- Jji Si * 

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FORD 1929 MODEL A 

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GLASSIC 1973 REPRO FORD MOOEL-A 

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TBE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1976 



17 




'■■■*• -it?*.*-,.. 

«.?••** fie 

srf^.v 
... . 

'■ 

Si- !*«%!= J. : 


TR 1L FLETCHER- 

, The New York Uaq 

' 3N SPA, N.Y., Ang. 
and sheepdog; who 
:o the name of 
thundered to his 
in show award 
he Mohawk Valley 
iib fixture at the 


_ :r ■ 

■aw** 


r-n. -r 


Z T 

c. y. 


■ ; Ch- Chenterra 
on. owned., by 
' :oen and Steve 
: Stunsonville, N.Y. 
r-old tri-color has ' 
quite . a winning 
ce he started -at 
kes two - months 
.led by Barger, he 
. g in rapid succes- 
iten Island, Cham- 
y and Nit-Ta-Nee, 
College, Pa. On 
his victory today, 

' on his 10th work- 


Books o£ The Times 


Changing Sexual Mores 


By GENE t MAEROEF 


DZtEMMAS OP MASCULINITY: A Study of 
College Youth. By Mirra Komarovsky. .274 
pages. W. W. Norton & Company. fS.95. 




■ ■ 




tf ';' •- #L 




4t-.) . 






|e 






sr%: 

i.t- 


ae- 


ro ost exceptional 
said Mrs. James 
Herscber, 111., who 
the red, white and 
e. “he has a lovely 
apd is a really 
dog." 

for a two-pound 
, Cindy 

s Ch. Pittore’s 
all. at! of the final- 
been best-in-show 
On form, the 
ad to be a black 
loodle, Ch. Bel Tor 
vned by Mrs. Mary 
id Pamela Hah, for 
r-old had six top 
his credit and 21 
tes. 

ighfieid’s and Glor- 
'artz’s Afghan, Ch. 
Sparkling Cham- 
s another who had 
ig very well. Two 
he came out of the 
; at Wiarton, .Ontar- 
best in show and 
; Canadian title. Six 
ier, the hound had 
Id at Collingwood, 


:■ 












contention was the 
ling black cocker 
f 1975, Walter and 
Tompson's Ch. Artru 
ather and Mrs. Rob- 
iso’s and . Donald 
Kerry blue terrier, 
nny Cincinnati Kid, 
one major award. 
;hief awards. 

■RIETY 6R0UPS 
nurarri Tyler, Judge)— 1, M*ty 
Pamela Hail’s block standard 
»lorr Btrf Tor BUsslulj 2, Or. 
•r'i and Desmond Murphy's 
ru melon Ah Sid Lion lamer, 
r, M. Hovt’s lhasa apso, 

I mar’s Rumoelstlltskln; 4, 
juflHtr Rivard's daimjtton. 
taha-OKnuMse. , 

-Judge]— 1. VJkJJ Wflhflflld'sl 
-■ — — ^jehaertz's Afghan, Chairmlon 
i ,-, r nj.i I, -m*- ChomMBne; 2. Debra 
« * w? .. a ii ^ giat^of5. Cnampion- tabs'* Artm- 
r . . . , dA Simanrek’s ondHarriat 
v 7 -71 r - 5 •* 1 -acts bloodhound. Champion 

Uffih 5 ■ U y- ,* 

• ’’ t 'i smwrfh dachshund. Cham-’ 

Hausman, Judge)— 1. Walter 
"npson's black codCWSpanWi 



We risad and hear much about how the 
changing society is affecting the thinking 

- and behavior of young women, but far 
less attention is given to the effects that 
the same shifting motes are having on 

- . men* 

If the woman’s role is being redefined, 

- ■then surely such a transformation will have 
• a profound impact on the men who live; 

love and work with the new women- : 

The old ways seem to die slowly, how- 
ever, and today's young man, sensing the 
insecurity of a new dawn, is caught on 
the horns of a dilemma. He knows that be 
is supposed to disapprove of the chauvin- 
ism associated with the former standards, 
but he feels discomfort with the uncertain 
social order of the future. 

In “Dilemmas of Masculinity: A Study 
of College Youth,” Mirra .Komarovsky, a 
Columbia University sociologist, examines 
the strains and pressures as they are per- 
ceived by a selected sample of young men 
in their senior year of college. 

On De finin g Manhood 

Most of the study, which reads ■vfery 
much like a sociology textbook, concen- 
trates on the struggle of the young men 
to define their manhood in light of the 
changing role of women. There is also a 
look, at how their masculinity is being 
shaped by interaction with their parents 
and by occupational aspirations. 

Perhaps the most interesting of Profes- 
sor Komarovsky's findings deal with the 
role conflicts that she saw the young men 
experiencing. 

- Many of the same liberals who said they 
endorsed the goals of the women’s 'move- 
ment and believed that a woman has a 
destiny outside of the kitchen admitted 
that they wanted to many women who 
would stay home and keep bouse for them. 
Some held this expectation even in the face 
of a wife wanting to pursue a career. 

’ It is 'appropriate for the. mother of a 
preschool child to take a full-time job, said 
one student “provided, of course, that the 
home was run smoothly, the children did 
not suffer and the wife’s job did not inter- 
fere with her husband's career.” One won- 
ders if running the home smoothly includes 
a five-course dinner waiting on the table 
each night for -the young husband. 

- Many of the young men who gave lip 
service to sex equality felt uneasy with 
women who had had more sexual experi- 
ence. Moreover, they wanted .to marry 
women who had not been "too promiscu- 
ous." 

In addition, tffe idea of a female whose 
intellect is superior to that of her male 
partner was an undesirable prospect to 
many of the college men. 

“I make it a-poirit never to take out a 
girl in my own field [economics], because 
I would resent possible competition with 
her,” said one senior. “I would bail out 
quickly if in talking to me a girl made 
better points in my field." 

Yet, there has apparently been a great 


deal of change in the manner In which 
college men view women and themselves. 
Some of the traits once deemed distinctive- 
ly male — aggressiveness, strength of char- 
acter, independence — and formerly consid- 
ered offensive in women are now more 
acceptable to young men. 

Furthermore, the need to dominate a re- 
lationship is ho longer of as great a con- 
cern to college men as it probably still Is 
to their fathers and grandfathers. 

_ ’ But the so-caUed sex revolution has 
taken -itp toll. Where once a college man 
could be a virgin without great embar- 
rassment, this seems no longer to be the 
" case. . mim ■ m 
■ The 25 to £0 percent of college seniors 
who confessed to being virgins felt that 
they were failures in an age -of sexual per- 
formance, when the natural culmination of 
dating is spending the night together. 

"Our impression is that shame over vir- 
ginity was much more prevalent among 
J these students than guilt ova* premarital 
Intercourse," writes Professor Komarovsky. 

What has not changed in its seminal 
influence on the shaping of a young man 
is toe importance of his relationship with 
his parents, according to the book. 

Today's college seniors, as has probably 
been true of young men through the ages, 
found themselves closer and more intimate 
with their mothers than with their fathers. 
Cold, unemotional fathers, incapable or 
afraid to express their love for their sons, 
were still very much in evidence. 

However, judging- by the results of some 
of the interviews and tats that Professor 
Komarovsky administered to the college 
men, there is reason to believe that more 
of tomorrow’s fathers, will be able to show 
love and warmth. without feeling a threat 
to their masculinity. These traits, often 
scorned by men In the past, seemed to 
have gained more acceptability. 

Professor Komarovsky is hopeful that 
there can be a continuing blurring of many 
of toe traditional sez roles and that toe 
end result will be toe evoivement of mores 
that allow women to realize more easily 
their career goals and their full develop- 
ment as human beings: 

Relations Between Sexes 

“We need to present to both men and 
women more vivid models of egalitarian 
relationships between the sexes in wrier to 
replace the traditional ones so deeply 
etched in social consciousness,” she writes. 

While toe tone of . the- book has an 
authoritative ring to it, and fnluition tends 
to support its findings, one wonders how 
representative it is of college seniors every- 
where. The sample was quite small— only 
a few dozen men on some of the questions 
— and it was limited to students at an un- 
identified Ivy League college, hardly a 
typical group. 

Moreover, the field work' was done 
during toe 1969-70 academic year and con- 
cerns itself with attitudes on a subject in 
which changes have been happening so 
fast that one wonders whether toe work 
Is already dated. 


VS. WEIGHS ACTION 
AGAINST EX-MARSHAL 


WASHINGTON. Aug. 6 (AP) 
— The Justice Department is 
considering prosecuting Frank 
Hayes, the former town mar- 
shal of Castroville, Tex., in 
connection with the shooting 
death of Richard Morales, it 
was announced today. 

Attorney General Edward H. 
Levi said the department’s civil 
rights division had reopened 
the case “to determine wheth- 
er any Federal action is appro- 
priate." 

Mr. Hayes was convicted of 
a state charge of aggravated 
assault in the shooting of Mr. 
Morales in Castroville on Sept 
14, 1975. 

Mr. Levi said civil rights di- 
vision officials and United 
States Attorney John Clark 
closed the case because of the 
department’s long-standing pol- 
icy against bringing Federal 


charges against a defendant 
convicted on a state charge re- 
sulting from the same incident 
But that policy “has been 
under intensive departmental 
review for some months," Mr. 
Levi said. He also said there 
had been suggestions that addi- 
tional facts might not have 
been brought to Mr. Clark’s or 
the Civil Rights Division’s at- 
tention that could bear on the 
“proper application" of the 
policy. 


2 From LI. Die in Accident 
HAWTHORNE, N.Y. Aug. 6 
(AP) — Two young motorists 
from Long Island were killed 
yesterday when their car struck 
two trees and burst into flames 
beside Interstate 287, near 
Harrison in Westchester Coun- 
ty. The victon s were identified 
as James Stone 3d, 19 years 
old, and Heidi Nystrom, 17, 
both of Massapequa. The po- 
lice said young Stone had been 
driving the car. 


90,000 COAL MINERS 
NOW IDLE IN STRIKE 


CHARLESTON, W. Va., Aug. 
6 (AP)—More> members of the 
Mine Workers; joined in a wild- 
cat strike of coal miners today 
as union leaders called two 
meetings to discuss the spread- 
ing work stoppage and a fed- 
eral judge signed an . order 
calling for arbitration. 

The union meetings were 
scheduled for- Sunday in Cedar 
Grove and Monday in Washing- 
ton in an effort to halt the 
strike that has idled 90,000 
workers in eight states. , 
About 12,800 of Kentucky’s 
estimated 40,000 miners stayed 
off their jobs today and H. N. 
Kirkpatrick, State Commis- 
sioner of Mines and Minerals, 
said that number was double. 
The number who had nots 
worked yesterday. 

A Consolidation Coal Com- 


pany vice president, Hazletlj 
Cochran, said that all 52 of the 
company’s mines eat of that 
Mississippi River were closed. 

A Federal judge in Charleston 
refused today to issue an in- 
junction against the strike but 
granted an order calling for ar- 
bitration. He said the arbitrator) 
should “determine whether this 
(controversy) is a violation of 
the implied no-strike clause in 
Ithe miners' contract” 

The strike began three weeks 
ago in West Virginia over job 
posting arid spread into Ken- 
tucky. Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, 
Alabama, Virginia and Pennsyl- 
vania. The dispute involved in 
the spread of the strike, how- 
ever, was over Federal court? 
orders issued against the min- 
ers, which they see as Federal 
intervention on the side of the 
mine owners. 


GIVE FRESH AIR FUND 
COUNTRY FUN FOR KIDS 



rrrrr 






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PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL 


BAPTIST 


ST. THOMAS 

Fifth Avenue at 53rd Street 

THE KEY. J88H JUNBEW, DJI., Rater 
SUNDAY SERVICES 
HOLY COMMUNION 
I,Sul12K«u 
I f, Hinas tap (Strain 

ItotaOeSjetot 

ROLY COMMUNION 
Mm. UnfiltlSuLt 12:11 |A 
Vei5ttpjL; TKLlttfljJ. fed* 


THEOSOPHY 


THEOSOPHY 

O^Lw&efTteesqtists 

347 East 72nd Street 
Leetsm. Soariay 7:30 P.M1 

"Fte MioiaoO Its Powers" 


WEDNESDAYS 7:30 P.IL-CraSK 
"REINCARNATION A KARMA" 


AIMMtings Free 
inquiries Invited 


Phone 535-2230 


Sports Today 


Yesterday’s Results atMonmouth 


Bt The Aoodued Prw* 


if LNlfter; h Robert Goush's 
i's EngMsfl 


nglJsfi sorinflpr suanlci. 
KMm: 3. Doris tnd Hants 
-«ter suaniel. Q. Nw wcn.* 
4, Mr. and Mis. L 
•r soanM. Ou Rawwrs 



husky. 


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■Kendrick. Wsel—t, Mrs. 
i 1 * and Dwald 
Ha'penny Ondnnatt Kid. 
ird's smooth fox. Ch. Vlscym 
rt and Janet Strtwe'a Anj-.^ 
tod SJaAlward The .Pinrte; ^ 
Watt's Welsh, Ch. Giwlw 


. Chihuahua, - .Ch- ■ WJJf"* 
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seoh Cltamuaene-s Yoriohon* 
■naby Ruck H 'RaWs 
^terrier, Ch. Midland's Wfhhr 






- .=ST IN SHOW 
■ -pines Carter. J-™- , r . 
— — -iri Stamen Jar aers S Wtand 
Oerter* ThunderaHon. 


' BASEBALL 

Yankees vs. Baltimore Orioles, 
OldrTimere’ Day f< at Yankee 

. Stadium, River ’Avenue and 
161st Street, the Bronx, Old- 
Timers' Game, 1:15 PM. ITele- 
vision — Channel 11, I PJWL)- 
( Radio— WMCA, 1 PJYL) 

vs. Pirates, twilight-night 
double header, at Pittsburgh. 

(Television — Channel 9, 7 

PJVL) (Radio — WNEW, 6 
PM) 

Philadelphia Phillies vs. Cardi- 
nals. at St Louis. (Television 
— Channel 4, 2:15 PJM.) 
v BASKETBALL 

Rucker Pro Tournament, East vs. 
West Classic, at Brandeis High 
School, Amsterdam and Colum- 
bus Avenues and MUPStreet, 
3:30 P.M. 

FOOTBALL 

Dallas Cowboys vs. Rams, pre- 
season game at Los Angeles. 
(Television— -i Channel 2, 19 


FIRST- J7.000, rodn. 2YO, 5% f. 
OneMAMIHUm. (Barrera* 3.M im.-2.in 

Tuxun (Detxhoussaw) 3.S0 2-BO 

Prumitn ..(Durkeel 3-W 

Thu* 4 .04 2-5. . SoaldmJ— Ton 1 * Bid, 
Jimmy's Around. 

■5ecONO-*4300, d., mdn. 2/YO & up. 
& 70 yds. 

Deliverer (Thomas! M0 5.00 3.40 

Poor Tom B. ... (Perm) 2-»i 

Carrie Too (Oobnella) 3AO 

Time 1:43 T-S. ScTKc,-wtf— Hick. 

Double 16-4} paid S2?.KL 

THIRD— 0.000. d.. 3YD t M, l l-ldm. 

Gar Rav (Tanner) 1&40 730 S.W 

Jay. Squared ....(Skinner) 4.20 3 JO 
Dedalus ....(Delrintroeyt) • • 4-40 

Tim* 1:44 4-5. - 

Exact" (M) paid S71. 

FOURTH-SUM, mdn, 2YO, 51&L . 

Snarklim Fallow -• {GressJ 10.60 3 60 

MidnrsM Maflns* (SanmelO ■■■ 4.40 3.40 

.El Exigent* . . . . (SolomoneJ 4.K) 

- Time— 1:04 1/5. Scratched— Uwtnt, Forte 
Party. Cornstalk, Radar Ranee. 

FIFTH — MAM, allow., 3 and 4YO. it. - 
First- Souaw ; . . (Bnwrtield) 12 20 5.«0 4 JO 
Country Wan . . ..(MacBettt) ... 4.40 J.oo 

Typhoon Dottle ...(Perret) 4.W 

Tima— 1:10. StraWied-Lait Bird, 

Exacts (1-3) paid S45B0. 


SIXTH— S8 .500, d., 3Y0, lAm. fhiffl. 
a-French Canar ..tMcCaul'y) 1.60 7.« 5.00 
•-MoaI Royal ..{BJnnfleld) BM 7.60 5 00 

MlnnnBiMa (Delarawsaye) 6.00 

Time— h«33/5. Scratched— Too Of The 
Will. 

*— cuuoled. 


SEVENTH-rSPOOO. allow., 3YO and us. 6f. 

Naudl (Thomail )5J» 8.00 4 60 

Slow Joe (Wilson) ... 5.40 3.40 

Ble Bulldorer (Parret) 2.80 

Time 1:09 2-5. 

Exacts (&4) paid SMA0. 


EIGHTH— SllJXD, allow., 3YO and us. 5 f. 
Hurt). 

Pleasant Girt ... (Thomas) 4.20 2.80 2.40 
Bras Of The Hh-jw (Barrera)... 3.60 3.00 

Cm 01 Maid ...(Sklmw) 4J3 

Time .-57 4-5. Scnrtched-Four Bells. Chris* 
Ventura, Rain Lilly, 


ASSEMBLIES OF GOD 


GLAD TIDINGS TABERNACLE 


339 W. SStd SL Rev. ft. S. Box. 

Hundny: U a m.. 3:13 and a 30 p.m. 
rKorean Svce. 11 am: Deal Svce. 3:15 BOB) 
Tllp*. A FrL 6:30. Prayer; 7:30. Bible Study 


ASSEMBLIES OF GOO— INDEPENDENT 


ROCK CHURCH 

j j. Vick, idolater 


Rev. JYed Packer 
Ttn»f 3:30: Tuas~ Wed.. Thara^ 


:» pan. 


Sunday 11 ami. A 

Sunday, 3:30 PJVL 

Pastor J. J. VJi* Breaches 

^by Argue With God? 


ALL WELCOME! 

JUR CONDITIONED AUDITORIUM 


CALVARY BAPTIST 
IS let SW Slmt (Mm. sa t Ttk Irl) 
BtltMCMir.tatinhdir 


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suciunminiiiTJiBtwiiwB 


COLLEGIATE CHURCH E5 
{Reformed Church Id America) 


UNITY 


r-HNTFV-, 


143 W. Slat St. 

ERIC BUTTERWORTH 

Minister 

Sunday 10:45 an, 1230 pm. 
“M THE FLOW OF LIFE” 


Erie BuHetworlh on radio: 
WEVD-FM (87,9) 

MoiL-FrU 7!l5ejn. 

Sot only 7:45a jh. 

Sunday 6U>P-7:DD p.m. 

Daily 7 : IS a.m. W DHA (105.5) 
Sunday only 7:45 i.m. WRFM 1105.1) 
For inlorma (inn call: SKI-7I2A 


CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 


THIRD CHURCH 
erf Ctirtot, SeJenUot 
Parte Avon no and 83rd Street 
Sunday— 11 am 
Srtidw Sdwol-lfaai (IfeRMfy) 
Wedneaday— « pm 
Jtadha Raaa-470 tat Ataoae 


There is a place for you at- 

MARBLE COLLEGIATE 


CHURCH 

FIFTH AVENUE AND 29th STREET 
Ministers 

DR. NORMAN VINCENT PEALE 
DR. ARTHUR CALI ANDRO . 

Augusts 


11:00 "Toward Undandaodfng 
The W1B of Gocf\ 


The Rav. D. O. OstroHi 
Associala Minister 


CHURCH FULLY AIR-CONDITIONED 

Muriod DiMctor, Mdn Ctok 
dhiaadTV- 



C*ta TV-SdO PM • mMAH lUMU PM 
ClMe TV-10410 PM BIN 064770. 


REUGIOU5 SCIENCE 


NE1IB10US SCIENCE 

ALICE TULLY HALL 
Broadway at 65th St. 

Dr. Raymond Charles Barker 

Minister 

Sundays at 11 A.M. 
Science of Mind Lectures 

TOMORROW 

“LET'S BE HAPPY” 


You Art Invited la Attend 
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HWTH-*J0m atluw., 3YO and w, 6 f. 
Restless WheaL ..(Namati) 14.80 5:60 4,40 
Wind Shot (Thomas) ... 360 2.80 

Dandy Dauutle (LuiiaiJ ... A40 

Tlnre 1:11 2%S. Scralchod ■Dutch Flam*. 
TrffKta (4-7-10) paid S35a40. 

Attendance I3.B3D. 
handla *1^586.231. 

Jfeathar cloOdr. fraefc fast 1 . 


ir&r-y- 


jn Rides 
ling to 
.ter Title 










■nre New York Thaea 

'TA, NJ., Aug. 6-r 
moment Ronnie 
- rotted . Twentieth 
Limited into ' the 
for the first time 
ago,- the mount Las 
wer in toe wording 
ifflons- .. . 

r-old- chestnut 
r is ridden is the 
'sections ‘by Robin 
on another cfaam- 
today^-and won it 

'X ' ’* 

-to Century limited 
the amateur-owner 
iunter -title" -'at the 
■imty show with 21- 
easily outscormg 


- RMi> 

GOLF • • • 

Metropolitan Amateur Champion- 
ship, at Plainfield ..(NJ.) 
Country Club, 8 A.M. 

HARNESS RACING 

Yonkers Raceway, Centra] and 
Yonkers ' Avenues, 8 P.M. 
I Television — Cham d 9, 11:30 
PJH.) 

Freehold (NJ.) Raceway, 1 PJM. 

Monti cello (N.Y.) Raceway, &30 
PM. _ ' : ' 

POLO 

Hckox Field. ■ Whitney _Laae, 
Old Westbury, Li., 3 PM. 

ROWING 

International Development Re- 
gatta. at Orchard - Beach 
Lagoon,' the Bronx,' 9 A-M. 

' SOCCER 

Cosmos vs. Earthquakes, at -San 

- Jose, Calif. (Television— Chan- 

. od 9, one hoar delay, .12 PAL) 
TENNIS 

"SI 00,000 Volvo International 
Championships, at North Con- 
way, N -H. (Tele visi o n Chan - 
neT 2, «30 PM) . 

- THOROUGHBRED RACING 

Monmouth Park. Oceanptirt, NJ., 

2 P.M, 


CROSSWORD PUZZLE 


ACROSS 


1 Parka , 

5 Sign on a basket 
12 Mulligan 

14 Desire - 

15 Shelter 

16 Honor. Ger. 

17 Nursery rhyme 
29 Sarcastic . 

21 Region of Tunisia 57 Battle 

22 Take it easy 
22 Slogan 
,25 Senator Frank 
27 Savior 
.39 Burned again- 

31 Grandma, at - 
times.. 

32 Cockney’s * 
sandwich 

33 Heights: Abbr. 

34 Protection 

35 Burma native 
39 Pittance 

37 Gaffe 

38 Ccmdition 


Edited by WILL WENG 

44 Writer Michael 13 Water source 
46 Most severe 
49 Crtq> aid 
52 Being » 

53. Norman Vincent 

54 Honor t 

55 Dillon 

56 Word with over 
or under 


DOWN 


1 Steevepart 

2 Roberts. 

3 Farm expert- . . 

4 id (at that 

time): Lat. ; 

' 5 Whip 
6 Drive out, in 
England 
' 7 Relative 

8 Speedy plane 

9 Small laugh 
It Proper 

39 Worn out jogger? 11 Emergent food 

41 Rose of- — producer of 

42 Tropical tree the 70’s 

43 Noise bard of old 12 Gardner . 


18 Lunar-solar 
differential 
IS Chemical 
compound 

23 Gas 

24 River to the 
Baltic 

25 Blatant 

26 Spartan serf 

27 Name for a dog 

28 Poetry Muse 

29 French port 
'31 Recipient 

34 Young horse 

35 Leave in a huff 

37 Mont 

38 Miss Lewis 
.46 Cheese oar ham 
41 Flying-camel 

expert 

43 Set of steps 

44 Egyptian alloy 

45 Bonboir 

48 State: Abbr. 

47 Bristle 

48 Card - 
59 Choose 

51 Teachers* org. 




lampion . with •* 8 -WTritney Handicap,' 6, PM, 


m> 


(*■ 


oto the 'final class. 

Century.. Limited 
T ahead thatiJQone. ", 
competitors had. 
/Catch him. - 

HUEjf AWARDS 
'ortlne HibiIet ChtnwlotBliip 
~Glei» Logos's San Man, 15 

.*«, finr Bolster's DooW* ' 


‘ TRACK AND FIELD 
Olympic teams of -United 1 States 


and Soviet Union; at College 
(Televi s i on — On n - 


Hwitef QatinHortstau-OBtiv- 
'■Central, lot,'* Towrtieth 
.■d, 21 pAlaits; nserve, Haney , 
animat MUIa, 9. 

•flu™ Hunter OiAmrianshln— . 
lAlsiree Farms Old Salt, 12 


. Park. Md 
ne) 7, 5 PM) 

V WRESTLING 
Bruno Sanmartino vs. Dangerons 
Stan Hansen,.- Madison 
' Square Garden, Eighth Avenue 
and 33d Street,' 
tion, 8:30 P.M. 


st exhiti- 


e. Satt conwany't 


sa.- 


<• a. - -. 


Huns- Huntere— Sudt -a Star, 
-mpersMldbin Ann . Hoars 


Junoers — Foxbra* Fima 


S--i i 


B Hunters, Uodar'SrtUfr- 
Inc, Jffaat Ad.--'- • 

' Hunlera— Grand Cortral, 
tfv. Award. 

- pleasure - Hojms~- Junior— 
ffl'fi* Mercia .Bteeze.HOr. 
um- RLArra' Farms 5wnhre. 
an YtoriJiio . Nuohtn— Jackie 
tie Dud. • 

-Etc Woriuflfl .Hurtw*-Hi»- 


bmt Ttiree^ailad- P te a w iv - J 
^Otanhoo’s Denuark. wen- 


?tn. -• M .- 


Pleasure Hows. 

. ms Iris Jade.' 

. WurkiM -• Hurtafs^-Omaron 
lottos. 


AKSWEK. T0 PBEYIOUS M2ZLE 


]'■ 



Qa0C3;>:5iS0DS:: : mas 



MADISON AVENUE 


imw imii Baptist 
Are. at 31st Street 
X0:45 ajn. Children's Oases 
1L Dr. W. WESLEY SHRADER, Minister 


COLLEGIATE CHURCHES 
(Unwind chureS t» AwiriwO 


Marble Collegiate Church 


ruth Avenue and 29th Street 
(See ZHsplou AavenUmvmi) 


itiMIe (Unllegtatf 


Second Arenas and 7th SOTS 
DR. HARVEY B. HOFFMAN. Minister 
II ojb. — Guest Preacher 
DR- NORMAN E. THOMAS 
“THE BANNER THEE" 

Gordon A- Seaman, Organist 


METHODIST 


JOHN STREET * 

Oldest mUuehtt Church 1* America 
DR. RICHARD' L. FRANCIS. PuStOI 
9:45 AJtL BIBLE CLASS 


SUNDAY SERVICES 11 AjM. 
Reverend DavM L d u n k B hl 


ST. MARK’S 

Dr. John J. Hicks. Minister 
19 AJH. "Christian CredlMUW 
Reverend Robert W. Emertcs 


HEAVENLY RESfl 


90th Street and Fifth Avenue 

SUNDAY, AUGUST 8 

IkOO ftirv— Hol» Communion 
10:30 a. m — PARISH SERVICE 
Chid Care— Semwn by Mr. Hooghlon 
HEAVE NLV REST VOLUNTEERS 
PARK CLEAN-UP— 2-3:30 PA4. 
"Commonlty Cancara In Action" 


Wednesday* st 6-JO p.m. 
Weekender Sendee 


Thursdays at 12 Noon 
Holy Comm. And Healing Service 


INTERDENOMINATIONAL 


UNITED SERVICES 

Grace Church • 
First Presbyterian Church 
Church of the Ascension 
This Sunday at 11 AJH. 

GRACE CHURCH 

Broadway at 10th Street 
Sermon by 

JOHN B. MACNAB 

(Nursery care provided) 


CHURCH OF THE TRUTH 


PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL 


SALEM 


(7U» Are.) 
139th SL . 
Adam Powell BlvdL 
"Ita The Heart OX Harlem" 

DR. r. HERBERT SHEETS. Pastor 
UAH. "TUe Declaration of 
Christian Freedom" _ , 
Rev. SCeivtn Rodmaou. aseociau Paslor 


PRESBYTER1AN 


BRICK 


WEST END 

u 


COLLEGIATE CHURCH 
nth SL W. of B’wtF 
WORSHIP iChlld Care: 


Fort Washington flwu£ar. 

Dr. DANIEL EL POLING. Mlnlxter 
U «-tn- Tie Rev. James B. Parsons 


I NTERDENOM IN ATIONAL 


Riverside 


Rlrendde Drive at 132nd Street 
Dr. Ernst t. cmrebaR. Senior mi «<■»»» 
SUNDAY lfl:45 A-M. 

DR. HENRY KUIZENGA 
Professor of Preaching 
School of TfaroJogr'at Claremont 

"THE. INCIDENTAL VIRTUE" 


The RtversWe Cholr 
dtaeeted far Frederick Swann 


Parking 


available (But. ISO 8tJ 

,.jl U tore at 10:30 a-«. 

Buffet tunchmm—Noon to 3 t.m. 


Broadcast Sunday WRVH-FM (106.7) 
U:45 ami- and 8 p.m. 


6:35 fun. Foma and Psmective on 
WRVR: ■■Criminal Justice?" Guest: 

Jeanette Soencer. Host: Joshua Smith 


CHURCH AIR- CONDITIONED 


LUTHERAN 




Cntral 
Park W. at 
69UI St. 

Sr. A- JAMES LADGHUN, Jr.. Pastor 
Frederick Crimes. Orrutet-Cbolxnuuter 
11 ajn. The Service and Sermon 
“THE DIFFERENCE CHRIST MAKES" 


IMMANUEL 


88th St- and 
Lexhwtan Are. 
20-S13S 

re. Hajmond C SehsU*. Pknor 
tv. Leonard ft. Kkh. Associate 
y SERVICES: 8 Iffll 11 


Slufep’s 


MB We* 

40th Stmt 
(ZIS-SH0) 
(One matk W«*f 0! Tteifa Sqwm)* 
The Rev. DALE D. HANSEN. Paitor 
U Lm. “COME OW HOUEI" 


SAINT PETER’S 


Pastor: Ralph stnrd Petmson. djx 
N ew orflew: Ml Lexlncum. TCL 753-4681 
Worship: Central Synatmoe. Lex, at 55 SL 
9 am Ma m. U am The Service 
Sermon: KENNETH LLOYD REICH LEY 
S pm Jam Veepen; NEW MUSS BAND 


FJLRK AVE. 
AT 

Blot ST. 
DR. JAMES SETH STEWART 
SUNDAY 11 A.M. ' 

He Rev. RICHARD PACINI 

■■AN INVITATION TO 

Dr. T. ChaSS , S?oreuilst-aioln>iAster 

(Nureerr care at It a-m-l 


QIpntral 


PARK AYE. 
at 64th ST. 


DONALD P. SCOTT. Minister 
Joint KoreAla irttfa . 

Jma Bun Pmbyi'TtaH Church 
11a.m. MR. THOMA^OHJ^NVmrechinr 
■■SOULS GET THIRSTY TOO" 


THE PARISH BF CALVARY 
HOLT COMHinilON & ST. SEORGE^ 


Church w Truth 

on fashionable Central Park South 

BARBIZ0N PLAZA HOTEL 

(Thealre olf Lobby). . 

. Sixth Avenue A Central Pk„ South 

Dr. John Lee Baughman 

TWO SERVICES 
SUN. at 10 AM and 11:30 AM 

“STRANGE 

PROPOSAL” 

SUNDAY" RAOfO BROADCAST 
IVOR at 6:45 PM. 
Dial-a-Prayer — JUdson 6-0264 


The Rev. Thonuu T. Pike 
The Rev. Donald R. Woodward 
SUNDAY SERVICES 


CALVARY CHURCH 

Park Ave. South at 21st Street 
U A.U. 

Sermon: The Rev. Thomas T. Pike 


CHURCH OF THE 

HOLY COMMUNION 

. Sixth Avenue at 20th Street 
B AJH. 

Sermon: The Rev. Thomas F. Pike 


ST. GEORGE’S CHURCH 


Sniyvesmt Sq. US St. E. or Srtl 
9:30 AM. 

Sermon: The Rev. Stephen S. Conner 


PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL 


CHRIST and ST. STEPHEN’S 


120 WEST MLh STREET 

The Rev. Joseph faL Zorawldt. Rector 
The Rev. Arthur K. LUIIcropp. nr, Asst. 
Sunday: 8:30 ajn. Eocnarut 
12 *utn- Parish Eucharist And Sermon 
IN onery care at 10:30 ajn.) 


Fifth Avenue 


Ftjth Avenue at GSth Street 
DR. BRYANT M. KIRKLAND 


THE REV. KENNETH D. HARVEY 
minister. McCracken Memorial 
Presbyterian Church. Belfau. Ireland 
will preach at noth service* 


11:0 0 A-M 

■■SEEING THE CITY'’ 
4:90 FJH. 

•UFE WITH SEW EYES 


DIAL-A-PRAYER, Mf-42» 
THOUGHT-LIRE. M8-42M 


Kareety 10:30-13: 38. Church School 11 ejn. 


IRST PH ffl us 

Fifth Ave. bet. U A « Streets 


ad) 


MADISON AVENUE 

liirtimn it Scran ty-lhlrd 
David H. C. Read. Senior Mlnlrter 
10:39 AJL Worship Service 

Sermon: The Fiery Furnace 

Reverend Paul Coleman, preachlnt 

O trail Frdwli Own 2 : V 
John weaver, orsanlat-cholr uuwwt 
QDid Core available jor crib through • 
fr-year-cid 

Dr. Read li hoa of "Pnlplt and People.’ 
rrhumrt LL- TV, Fridays at IL:30 AJL 


GRACE CHURCH 


_ Broadway at Tenth Street 
The Rev. C. FIBSloou AUlsun, Rector 
. The .Rev. Paul FJ*. ZahL Curate 
Sunday: 0 a.m. Holy C om munion 
11 a.m- United Service 
The Rev. John B. Macoab 
Wednesday 6 j am. Holy f-flmnwntM 


HOLY TRINITY 

316 East 88 5l. 289-4100 


Rev. F. Reid Isaa c . Rector 
Re v. Pan) B. Feuersietn. ajbi sant 
SUNDAY: 8:30 a-m. Holy Communion 
10: SO. Holy Communion and Sermon 
Preacher: Mr. ISAAC 
(Nursery Care at 10:30 a.m.1 
Wfedn&day 6:30 pja. Holy Communion 


Inrurnattan 


Madison Ave. 
81 35th St. 
8X7. CANON ROBERT J. LEWIS. Rector 
Harvey Buffett. Director of Music 
8:38 ana.— Holy communion 
11 am.— Momlnc Prayer it Sermon: Rector 
wednnday 12:05 p.m.— Holy Communion 
Atr-CondUtouee Jot eU irmcea 


EPIPHANY 5;% 

nr. Hew York ft Memorial Ho^alala 
8 A.M. < 12:15 P.M. Holy Communion 
•10:30 AJH. Morning Prayer 
Sermon: Or. Belford 
"CHRISTIAN PARADOX” 
Anthems of Ralph Vaughan- Williams 
(Nursery care at io JO a.m.) 
Wednesday 5 P.M. Holy Communon 

Ctenir ERNEST E HUNT, Rector 
Lae A. Beltard. George Benson. * 
C. Hugh Hildeslcy. WdHam H. Stempor 


PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL 


ST. MARK’S 


Dt-THR-BOWEEY 

_ _2nd Are. tk ism st- 

Son. 14:30 a.m. PARISH EUCHARIST 


ST. MARY THE VIRGIN ZT 1 

The P-er. DONALD U GARFIELD. Rectir 
.. ..The Rev. John Paul Boyer 
Mct.eU Robinson. Director of Music 
Mass 7:30. ft. lo a-m. & 5 p. ro- 
ll. Hich Mass wiih SennoD: Rr. Garfield 
G. Evening Prayer and Beneduxian 
Mare dally 7:30, 12:30 & 6:18 


The Parish of Trinity Cburdi 

The Rev. Robert Ray Parks. D.D., Rector 

TRINITY 


Broadway 
and Wall SL 
Rev. Bertram N. Berlong. Assoc. Rector 
Holy Cc mm union 8 and ll:u AM. 
Worship through Music 11 a m . 
Sermon: The Rev. aamnel E. Benson 


ST- PAUL’S Jg ® sl 

Hriy Oommmtiotr 9 AJH. 

Sermon: The Rev. William B. Gray 


ROMAN CATHOLIC 


RUTGERS 

MiTdiiii wHIImub, Orcanlal 


PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL 


CATHEDRAL 

i • . ST. JOHN TEX DIYXKE 


'll# 

Iwa 


Csttafrnl o vena iU arm to rtjwam- 
o? the hiwnm /umfly." 3 bo» Morton 
Today iSaL) 3 p.m. Evensong 
SIS Organ Recital: David Ptearro 
San. V 9:39. n , m - ; 4 tEvenwig) 


ti, Luargy and Sermon: Canon West 
4 pa 14th Aimlversarx of the 
Ttadeacndenre of Jirtatta .. . 
The Rt Rre. Herbert Edmondson. U.A. 
The Bishop. of Jamaica 


thru Sat 7:15 am: 3 njn Eniumic 

Wed. 12:15 DO. R-C. A Healing oerrlce 


METHODIST 


vna- 


8/7/79 


CHRIST CHURCH 


PARK AVENUE ai 60th STREET 

DR. DAVID JAMES RANDOLPH 

SUNDAY U AM. 

DR. F. RODERICK DAH 

“A THIRD CENTURY — UNDER GOD” 
CtiU Carr. Ckwch alr-UHtditmed, 
Dr. Raatioh*: Natknal Radio Pnlplt 
Sunday! 7:05 AJL. WNHC 66» AM 


1M7 Amsterdam Are. at 112 Uu 67B-6888 


ALL SAINTS W 

The Rev. R. DeWItt Mallary, Jr.. Rector 
SUNDAY 9 a-m. Holy Eochartot 
it. /THQpaT. KUCHA R1ST it SERMON 
Preacher: Ur. Bd«*rrf Henley 


ASCENSION 


Fifth Are. 
at leth Sl 
R ev. DONALD ft. GOODNESS. Rector 
BAS a.nu 6 pan.— Hdy C MTU) union 
Holy Commanhm 8 mo. Tact., Wed., m. 
6 pan. Wed., U N. Than., 9 a-m. Sal. 


LITTLE CHURCH «S D coU* 


TRANSFIGURATION, One Eaat Slh SL 
Rev. Norman J. Catir, M.A., S.T.B., Rector 
SobdiT: s A 9 i . m. Kdi crnmnuniv 
1L SOLEMN EUCHARIST A SERMON 
Preacher: FH FRARY 


RESURRECTION 


115 EAST 74th STREET 
PENTECOST K 

8 and 10 :30 A, XT.— EUCHARIST 
WEEKDAYS: Phone 879-020 


§t.®artlfoInmpm ’5 


Park Avenue at 51st Street 

BEY. TERENCX J. FINLAY. DJ), Rector 

8 and 9:30 ift Holy Communion 

1 1 ajn. Morning Praye r and Sermon 
TEE REVEREND 

ANDREW J. W. MULLINS. M. Dr». 


Holy Qnnmtmlon: Ta«. 12:10 turn. 
Wednesday S ajn. and. 5:13 am.; 
Than. H.C. A Herting SeryleB 12: M PJa. 
Evening Prayer: Tuts. JrThurs. 5:15 p-m. 


Kttrrery care Sun. 10:30 am- 12:20 pm 
Cburdt completely air-condltlOiMd 


ST. IGNATIUS’ 


Wen 57th St- n Block west of Broadway! 
0*20 p m , Mare 11 a.m. Mare 
Weekday Uarere: Tore.. Than.—* 


AVE MARIA CHAPEL 

Catholic Traditionalist 
Center 

m - ’wEsranSI. 'BW* 

LATIN MASSES 


TRADITIONAL 


SUNDAYS 9. 10: 15 & 1 1 :3D AJW. 
HOLY DAYS 1 i AAf. & 8 PJL 
FIRST FRIDAYS: 8 PJH. 
FIRST SATURDAYS: 12 Noon 


Orerflmr accommodated 
On doaed Circuit Tcbmirim 


RADIO MASS SUNDAYS 
World-Wide 


In New York. Netr Jersey A> Conn. 
. WVOS-Nfe» Rodirile , 
1450 AM & 937 FM 8:30 AJff. 


ST IGNATIUS’ 


11 AJt. solemn lliaa 


Parte Are. 
at Bi St. 


UNITARIAN UNIVERSAL! ST 


ALL SOULS UNITARIAN 


80th Street and Lexmctoa Araroe 
WALTER DONALD KRPJG. D.D.. MtoUWT 
Sunday li a.m. Caret Preacher 
The Her. ALAN L. HCLY 
The Commanlty Church, N.Y.C, 


Community Church 


ST. JAMES’ 


Madison Avenue 
at Tire street 
Th* Her. Ralph H. Warren J.v 
Prtec- in -Chare* 


Sunday: 8 ub. Holy Cq tts a ffn lea 
U a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon 
Preacher The Rev. Carol Anderson 
(Child cue (or 11 a.m. servlcei 
H.c., wed. 8 ajil; Thors. 12 Noon 


40 EAST 35TK STREET 
11 AJ(. 

Rev. Jeffrey Campbell 

of Putney, vt. 

A CHUP-CH FOE ALL PEOPLE 


YOGA 


YOGI GUPTA ASHRAM 


LECTURE 

Saiurda* Aue. 7-6-30 P.M. 
'■NECffiSITY OF THE GURU" 
Sneaker Swada Madhavuunda 

East 56 SL NYC ^fl-1348 








j; ■: . 3 :. ^ I 




















THE NEW. YORK TIMES , SATURDAY, AVGUST 7,.W6 


Slje^elUfJ|0ri« Sinter 


ARTHUR OCHS SULZBERGER . 

Publisher 

K 

• JOHN B. OAKES, Editorial Pttgefiitor 
FRED HECHINS3S, j4x«£«<aiiR Editorial Page Editor 


Founded in 1851 


ADOLPH S. OCHS, Pubfa her 1898-193 f 
ARTHUR HAYS SULZBERGER, Publisher 1935-1951 
ORVIL E. DEYFOOS, Publisher 19S1-1BS3 


A. M. ROSENTHAL, Managing Editor 
SEYMOUR TOPPING, Dt pat g Managing Editor 
ARTHUR GELB, Assistant Managing Editor 
VETER MHAONES, Assistant Managing Editor 
JACK ROSENTHAL, Associate Editor 


CHARLOTTE CURTIS, A km lb Editor ■ 
CLIFTON DANIEL, Associate Editor 
MAI FRASKEL, Amocic£« Editor . 
TOM WICKER, Associate Editor 


Beyond the Hospital Strike 


The strike of municipal hospital workers here is a 
no-win confrontation that has tragic implications extend- 
ing far beyond the confines of this troubled city. . 

The strikers’ demand for a freeze 'on layoffs cannot 
be met because a near-bankrupt city and fiscally troubled 
state simply cannot afford to provide more funds — in 
fact, must offer less — to an already overextended 
hospital system. That system must be rationalized and 
reduced in order to halt ruinous, runaway health care 
costs— and that means fewer hospital jabs. 

The impact of this essential cutback could be eased 
if the hospital union were willing to sacrifice hard-won 
benefits to save jobs, a statesmanlike and compassionate 
short-term solution. But in the long run, there must be 
fewer hospitals, fewer beds and fewer hospital workers 
if the city is to have an efficient health care system 
that can meet the needs of its sick with fair return to 
employees at a price the public can afford to pay. 

Instant shrinking of the hospital bloat, however, could 
create new and even more serious problems for the city 
and state. With unemployment already at an epidemic 


The Issue: Apartheid 


When Secretary of State Kissinger told the Urban 
League this week that “the risks of confrontation" were 
rising in sputhem Africa and that “time is running out” 
for halting the escalation of violence in that area, he 
may not have anticipated how quickly events would 
underscore his assessment He was referring primarily 
to combustible situations in Rhodesia and Namibia 
(South-West Africa), but portentous explosions came 
in South Africa. 

Mr. Kissinger was justified in calling Rhodesia "the 
most immediately dangerous” problem, while emphasiz- 
ing that a deadline was also looming for a solution in 
Namibia, the country South Africa controls under an 
invalid League of Nations mandate. But the outbursts 
in South Africa's black townships— the second series 
in three months — indicate unmistakably that the time 
is also at hand for a basic decision by the white rulers 
in Pretoria. 

Fortunately, the student-led black protests this week 
have not provoked the savage police retaliation that 
brought death to 176 and injuries to 1,100 in June. But 
the climate of protest boycott and strike now seems 
endemic in some of the segregated townships outside 
the major South African cities; and the most significant 
development is that traditional black leaders appear to 
have lost the capacity for controlling their population. 

The white Government will delude itself and invite 
more bloodshed if it assigns the blame exclusively to 
outside agitators and insists that only a tiny fraction 
of South Africa's 18 million blacks is involved. Revolu- 
tions are usually ignited by militant minorities: but they 
escalate when the instigators are able to exploit'widely- 
held resentments and blatant injustices. 

A “peace rally/’ called by traditional black leaders 
with Government approval in Johannesburg's Soweto 
township last Sunday, quickly became a vehicle for 
strident demands on the white rulers for drastic reforms, 
including the scrapping of the doctrine of apartheid, 
which forces urban blacks to become citizens of distant 
tribal homelands many of them have never seen. 

If the Pretoria Government will turn resolutely- away 
from that despised and unworkable policy, it can legit- 
imately ask other governments for tolerance and time 
to work toward peaceful resolution of an extremely 
difficult racial problem. But if it persists with apartheid, 
it can expect only greater isolation in the international 
community and accelerating violence at home. 

Many white South African leaders comprehend that, 
these are really their only choices: but if the two men 
meet again soon; it might help if Secretary Kissinger 
would put these narrowing options to Prime Minister 
Vorster even more forcefully than he has previously. 


Regulating Regulations 


The old adage had it that the law is what the Supreme 
Court says it is. A more modern and accurate version 
is that the law is what the bureaucrats say it is, until 
and unless their version is challenged in the 
courts. 


It is only in a very elementary civics course that 
pupils are taught that Congress passes a law and 
that’s, it In today's complex world, the reality more 
often Is that Congress passes a law and then nothing 
happens until the relevant Federal agency issues the 
regulations spelling out precisely what that agency 
thinks the law means and how it should be applied. 
Usually there is. a period of time— often 30 days-^-in 
which citizens are allowed to comment on the regula- 
tions before a final set of rules with the force of law 
Is published in the Federal Register. 

Regulations now govern directly, the actions and lives 
of tens of millions of individuals and innumerable 
organizations of ‘the most diverse kinds, from giant 
international corporations to small local private schools, 
and- hospitals. Bureaucratic regulation has become an 
increasing problem in this country, bringing frequent 
protests that the regulations go further than Congress 
intended or sometimes even that they directly contradict 
the intention of Congress. The complaint is also heard 
often that those affected by a set of regulations have 
little or no opportunity to comment before it is embedded 
in the concrete of law.' 

It is against this background that H.E.W. Secretary 
F. David Mathews has just announced a major reform 
of his huge agency's regulatioii-writing procedures. Now 
the emphasis will be upon getting the widest possible 


stagq- here, most laid-off hospital workers will wind up 
on welfare at a cost to city and state which might even 
exceed their hospital wages, to say nothing of the social 
costs of enforced idleness. . ’ 

The striking workers, the city and the state are 
common victims of a deeper national malignancy— the 
inability of the private economy to .offer jobs to all 
Americans who are willing and able to work and the 
failure of the Federal Government to provide alternative 
employment. For all of its alleged-^and real — profligacy, 
New York City, through generous social programs, has 
given the dignity and hope of useful work to thousands 
of the dispossessed from all over the country. New'York 
can no longer afford that- luxury. But the painfulness of 
the cure exposes the nation's shortcomings. 

' New York City’s municipal hospital strike is just one 
' angry manifestation of the bitter frustration that festers 
in urban ghettos across the land where the American 
dream of a decent, productive life for too many seems 
' all but unattainable. Unless 'Washingon heeds the 
warning signs. New York will not be the only city to 
suffer the tragic consequences of neglect and frustration. 


sample of public thinking before and not after the 
regulations are written. Mr. Mathews is also requiring 
that the 1,000 or so H.E.W. employees who write 
regulations attend special English classes to help them 
make their prose more ’ nearly understandable by 
ordinary citizens. 

These changes seem so sensible and desirable that 
it is strange that they only appear at this late date. It 
would be a good idea if all Government agencies that 
write die actual detailed law of the land followed 
suit. 


Shaping Up the Courts 


The bill signed by Governor Carey after a special 
session of the State Legislature opens up a new era in 
court administration and financing in New York. 
Albany’s legislators have heeded* the strong appeal of the 
executive branch, the reports of task forces on modern- 
izing the courts and, not least, the desires of constit- 
uents in towns and cities up- and downstate. 

The fact that this bill, plus approval of a proposed 
constitutional amendment on other judicial matters, 
together add up to less than a weighty package of court 
reforms should not detract from what has been, accom- 
plished. Since the regular session had resulted in rancor 
and party blame-fixing, the extraordinaiy session must 
be considered a victory and a beginning, hot just for 
court reform, but for the principle of the state sharing 
in various responsibilities of government. 

The financing bill will help the hard-pressed localities 
to administer and deliver justice. It calls for the state to 
assume the cost of running the courts by stages over a 
four-year period- Not only the Supreme Court but the 
special civil and criminal courts all over the state will 
benefit For New York City’s courts, it means that the 
. state eventually will provide about $88 million a year. 

The court reorganization amendment, which will re- 
quire second passage next year and approval by vote's 
in a statewide referendum, provides for centralized ad- 
ministration under a chief court administrator, a stream- 
lined procedure for investigating, disciplining or remov- 
ing judges, and appointment by the Governor of the 
seven-judge Court of Appeals on recommendation of a 
commission on judicial nomination. 

The seeds are planted in this amendment for major 
court reform in two even more important fields: Consoli- 
dation of all the lower courts within an upgraded State 
Supreme Court, and appointment of all judges after 
merit screening by a nonpartisan commission. Both were 
included in Governor Carey’s original court reorganiza- 
tion plan. Both will require cranking up again if New 
York’s court system is to be the equal of other modern- 
ized state courts. 

While these administrative changes may seem tech- 
nical, they are inseparable from the larger goal of tbe 
efficient and' equitable delivery of justice. 


Freedom at Bat 


The newly ratified major league baseball contract, 
hammered and chiseled out between players and owners 
will allow the hired help — catchers, pitchers, fielders, 
designated hitters, etc. — to join the rest of the working 
stiffs in America — plumbers, lawyers, secretaries, TV 
dnehorpersons, etc. — who regularly change jobs with 
impunity, for less or more money, in locations of their 
choice— if they have a choice. 

After years of virtual bondage under the harsh 
reserve clause system, which bound a player to one 
club until traded, sold or released, the new freedom- 
of -movement labor contract should end a practice that 
caused dissension on and off the field. The four-year 
basic agreement covers working conditions and includes 
a benefit plan that takes into account the perishable 
commodity of speed, stamina and youthful legs and 
arms. Players will have the right to demand a trade 
after. five years in the majors, to negotiate with a limited 
number of other clubs, and to arbitrate salary differ- 
ences by mutual consent. 

As the six-figure players and the seven-figure owners 
cried all the way to the bank, it has sometimes been 
difficult to arouse cheers from the fans in the bleacher 
seats: But the new agreement should help to bring the 
big bats out of the lawyers' offices and back, to the 
playing fields without disrupting the team lineups or 
changing America's favorite national pastime— getting • 
a raise. 


Letters to 


To Review the Service Academies 


On Medicaid Fraud 


To the Editor: 

The Times on July 22 Op-Ed page 

published an article by Gen. Sidney 
B. Berry, Superintendent of the United 
States .Military Academy, on alleged 
cadet cheating. The article seemed 
more interesting because of what it 
did not say than for what it said But 
it raised the ' fundamental issue of 
“Why?* 

' Unfortunately, the » general’s pro- 
posed inquiry draws its conclusions 
before it begins. He states that duty, 
honor and . country define' the- ideals' 
of West Point and the Army, that it 
is realistic for American society to ex- 
pect to have Army officers who neither 
lie, .cheat, steal, nor tolerate those 
actions in others and that the cadets 
will reaffirm the Honor Code: . 

In recent years we have witnessed 
a series erf events that raise -serious . 
questions with regard to the military’s, 
honor. The wholesale s killing, of 
civilians -in Southeast Asia, the My 
Lai incident, the treatment of .CoL 
Anthony Herbert, the most decorated 
soldier of the Korean War. and the 
sentencing of Lieut. William CaHey did - 
not bespeak application of a high code 
of honor. ' ' 

Is the Honor Code continued col- 
laboration between high-ranking mili- 
tary officers of the Pentagon "and the . 
manufacturers of military equipment? 


Is it pentagon promotion of the sale of 
American military equipment abroad? 

I received toy Marine Corps training 
during World War H at Quantico and 
recall most vividly the continual 
regard for the enlisted mem As officers 
we were never to eat ontif our men 
had been fed, never to be bedded until 
our men were. We engaged a political 
discussions to help us answer ques- 
tions by enlisted men, to convey an 
understanding of what -the war- was 
about. This kind of code had results 
quite different -from the recent. wars 
in ■ Southeast Asia where facts were 
distorted both for soldiers and civil- 


With the possibility 1 of a new 
Washington Administration headed by 
a graduate of one of tbe academies, it 
would be appropriate to undertake a 
major review not just of West- Point* 
and its Honor Code but of the- func- 
tions of air the United States ;mflitary 
academies and 1 the military- structure 
itself. To be effective, such a review 
commission .must -be. composed, of- at 
least equal representation irom the 
civilian' area, including persons.who 
have been -involved in . attempting to 
reduce the- impact onthis country of 
the mdustriaKmilitary complex. 

- : .. . Robert J. Schwartz 

Captain, ILS-M.C.R. (Ret) 
New York,' July 30; 1976 


Tothe Editor: 

- It was most disturbing tc 
day Dr. Rutsteln's remarkable 
for the medical professio 
doctors who have succumb 
inherent weaknesses (alas, n 
character but) in the medics 
.as Dr. Rutstein urges, are 
be pitied than scorned. 

- His entire thesis is incomp 
to me. Physicians who knov 
callous# rip off Medicaid a 
and their larcenous conduct 
excused, condoned or obfc 
tortured logic. We, as taxi 
suffer when such criminal 1 
not adequately rooted out i 
priately punished. 

I dare say opportunities a 
tions abound for all of us to 
daily basis if we are so di| 
that does not mean that sac 
ever foe. rationalized in . a I, 
society. 1 Dr. Rutstein does 
profession, and the taxpayi 
state a gross disservim in-s 
Ms faefle explanation for tf 
some of bis colleagues, v. 
■'*’ - , Richard 

*. N.Y.S. Welfare Inspeci 
New York/Jai 


Power from Canada 


To the Editor: 

Your July 29 editorial on Con Ed 
stated, “Unfortunately for Westchester 
— and for New York City, which is 
similarly burdened by Con Ed rates 
that are more than double the next 
highest rates in the nation — there is 
no place to turn, at least in tbe near 
future.” 

You correctly identify the political 
im practicality of seeking to take State 
Power Authority, electricity away from 
the upstate communities* which now 
enjoy that low cost energy, as various 
Westchester elected officials recom- 
mend. 



Hydro-Quebec is willing to contract 
with the Power Authority on a long- 
term basis for the sale of 800 mega- 
watts of electricity per year, 10 per- 
cent of Con Ed’-s total requirements. 

r urge your editorial support for 
speedy P.S.C. approval of Power 
Authority plans to connect Con Ed 
with the clean, safe and inexpensive 
Canadian '“gold’’ — ' hydro-electric 
power. . 

Canadian power can reduce costs of 
living, create' jobs (directly along the 
power line and indirectly by making 
New York industry more cost com- 
petitive j and reduce reliance on Arab 
oil exporters in return for reliance on 
a more stable and trustworthy ally, 
Canada. 

Selling public power to Con Ed will 
increase needed Canadian Government 
revenues and improve- the serious 
Canadian balance of payments prob- 
lem. 

A Quebec-Utica power line is in 
everyone's best interests. 

Bruce Caputo 
Member of Assembly, 87th DisL 
Yonkers, Aug. 2, 1976 


To the Editor: • y 

. ' ". The ideas expressed ^ 
R. Rutstein.. (letter. July sty- 
tors are “unfairly, even 
tempted- by the foolish; 
bureaucratic . .welfare sys 
committing Medicaid frai 
morally obtuse they so un- 
overs from the Watergate 
It is one thing to argue, 
stein does, that the Medi 
payment function .is inep 
istered — so ineptly admini 
doctors Can rip it off at w 
quire another thing to ar; 

' Rutstein' also" does, that tl 
lack of control and buns 
effectiveness themselves s 

culpate tbe physician wl 
multiple payment for a s 
ment or who is recorape ns 
ices never rendered. 

This is akin to blami 
woman who is mugged for 
the street alone— after all 
and vulnerability were jus 
live for the poor, benigh 
• to pass up. St^ 

New York, J 


Convention Repo 


P.L.O. as Protectors 


To the Editor 
Like Frank Vizard (lei 
“Report From a 21-Ye 
body”'), I am a 21-y 
attended the Democratic 
but that is where our sir, 


But you infcorrectly- assume there is 
"no place to turn ... in the near 
future.” We should turn to Canada. 

By connecting Utica, N.Y., to the 
Hydro-Quebec power company by high 
voltage power line. Con Ed users could 
begin receiving Canadian electricity 
next year for 2 cents per kilowatt hour 
instead of tbe 8 cents per kilowatt 
hour now being charged by Con Ed. 


To the Editor. 

The recent news story that our 
diplomats in Beirut had begun receiv- 
ing regular security protection from 
the Palestine Liberation Organization 
raises a very interesting question. 

From whom are our diplomats being 
protected? . 

Inasmuch as it is primarily the P.L.O. 
that has embraced, encouraged and 
protected the. various terrorist organi- 
zations in that area, in effect, we seem 
to be receiving security protection 
from the very same people whom we 
need protection against 

Shades of A1 Capone and the Roaring 
Twenties. Albert Esterow 

Fresh Meadows, N. Y n Aug. 2, 1976 


‘Modesf Proposals on Unemployment 


First of all, I was glad 
out an assigned seat: it 
attempt being a somebc 
that what knowledge, e 
satisfaction I got out of 
tion was completely rel 
amount of effort I pu 
mingled with delegates 
past guards onto th§ floor 
of the heavies, and evi 
didn't have to write anytl 
lege .press credentials m 
obligated to conduct son 
anyway. . 

It probably would have 
and less tiling to stand i 
and condemn “the elite” ’ 
knowledfeing my present 
strikes me as extremely 
ivory-towerish for a self-< 
aider such as Mr. Vizard tx 


To the Editon 

To meet the criticisms of the Hum- 
phrey-Hawlons Bill regarding its in- 
flation potential, I suggest some 
modest proposals. Since business and 
labor oppose price and wage controls, 
there may be mo other alternatives to 
these types of proposals. Briefly: 

1. For each half-percentage point 
above 4 percent unemployment in each 
local area, lower wage rates for the 
employed and job-seekers alike by, 
e.g., 2J£ percent. This would reduce 
unemployment and inflationary pres- 
sures. 

2. Reduce unemployment compensa- 
tion on the same basis (i.e., related' to 
local jobless rate) — the lower the rate, 
the longer the unemployed' must wait 
before receiving benefits, thus reduc- 
ing inflation and creating incentives 
for the unemployed to find jobs. 

3. Employer payroD taxes for un- 
employment compensation should, be 
reduced, perhaps to zero on wages* of 
high seniority workers who have a 
low risk of becoming unemployed any- . 
way — thus providing more investment 
capital, and giving employers more 
incentives to hire more people (whose, 
wages would be exempted from un- 
employment compensation taxes) . 

4. No employer Social Security taxes 
on wages of workers with less than 
five years service with an employer. 

5. Soda! Security is an area allow- 


ing for great progress against inflation. 
We will soon have too many people 
not working with high retirement in- 
comes — but not enough people produc- 
ing higher levels of goods and services. 
This is real Inflation. The solution? 
Euthanasia for all persons 75 and older. 
If abortion before birth is acceptable, 
why- not departure 75 years after 
birth? 


The inflationary, monies eliminated 
by this wise policy would be sub- 
stantial. It would also release thou- 
sands of employees now taking care 
' of the 75-plus population (now ex- 
panding more rapidly than other age 
groups) — thus inducing anti-inflation- 
ary pressure on wage levels' in •'the 
general-economy. 

- 6. Medical costs' — .due partly to 
shortages of health personnel — are a 
major' contribution to inflation. One 
reason far this shortage is that we have 
too many persons engaged in research 
making it possible for ' too many 
people to live too long. Those persons 
should be out there practicing; not 
researching, thus producing another 
reduction in medical costs. 

Implementation of such recom- 
mendations 'would help make the 
Humphrey-Hawkins BUI an outstanding 
success. And; euthanasia at 75 would 
give our young people something tu 
live for. Maynard Swift 

Washington, Aug. 2, 1976 


self-chosen insiders for .hh • 
sorry for Mr. Vizard, v:w- 
strange logic of defensive? 
to have resigned himself fp. • 
body without a ... . 

My -peter considerr jEnU : . - 
well informed.” Ifsoj te-* 
tainiy know that Jimmy. , 
hardly a member of the st 
ing class elite, and was hf 
nated by members of that f . 
only after primary, voters j 

states gave Carter the n* \ 

gates that many of the pat 
began- to support him. 
overused cliche that beccr r ,. 
ingless when -applied to ? ." 
everyone,” but to fit Jack-. 
George Wallace and'Jimmy „' 
the same “elite," as -• 

tempts, would require prte^ - 
And lest your readers .1 
to believe that all 21-yeaJ. • 
Mr. Vizard’s friends, preferri 
party to seeing or hearing 
convention, -let me pilt in a 
for my**buddie5, most of wl ••• 
have sacrificed a' month of . 
Witness the convention. Pi _ 
Vizard should seek out 
acquaintances. M. E 
• ; Roslyn, L. L, Julj 1 




' K » m * 




TheNewYorkTimes Company 

239 West 43d SL.N.T: 10038 * J 


Corporate 


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Affiliated Companies 


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BENJAMIN HANDEL man, Senior Vies President 
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Warning on Alcohol • - 

To tint Editor: • 

Alcohol abuse Is the nu...; 
drug problem ip America 
causes, directly or - indire© 
half of all arrests in the 
During the - past five y» 
125,000 Americans were Bdf 
jured in aicobol-telated auto - 
That’s mure than all the'U: ... 
ties - in the Korean and Vied ’ 
combined. 

If nothing else, I think tht 
General should make it mane', 
every bottle of liquor and ew 
advertisement to cany -a r - 
label on the dangers of alebbl 
to toe warning on cigarette j . 
in all cigarette ads. 

Canada's Health Minister j ' - 
londe has already decreed tb* 
products sold in Canada wl 
quired to carry a warning I 
may be hazardous to health.- 

The United States shoiilf - 
suit Joseph A. 

. . . Brooklyn, July 








l}*jb 0* li£o 


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THE NEW YORK TIMES , SATURDAY, AUGUST 7S2976 


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i.'SM'i- ftir • 



Growth, It Is Argued, Does Not Lead to More Jobs 


By Denis Hayes 

SHlNGTDN-^Ronald Reagan re 1 
told the Detroit Economic Club 
shift to energy-efficient small" 
'would cost at least 200,000 : 
-an workers tbeix jobs.' , tbe ex-, 
t council of .the AFL^OQ. has - 
for sustained energy growth in 
to promote “high employment, 
mie economy, and a prosperous 
tisfying way of life." Advertise- 
by major energy companies ■ 
Bpeatedly asserted that reduced 
, . tohsumpfion would , generate 
V read unemplo^ent . ' . 

■ J ' -..e assertions are rooted in a 
>"n myth: that .energy growth . 
.^o more jobs. In fact, however, 
posite is more frequently true. 


New energy facilities are among the 
least labor-intensive investments a 
society can make. : Moreover, the fuel 
. such facilities- produce is .often in di- 
rect competition with labor. John' 
' Winger, vice president, for energy 
economics at the Chase Manhattan. 
Bank, points- out that "over the years, 
we have .substituted . energy-powered 
capita; equipment -for people.” 

- - Not to /put too fine a point on it, 
those who justify, large-scale energy 
growth on the basis- of jobs: may be 
' selling 'the public a bill of goods.' 

\ Analysts at the Federal Energy Ad- 
ministration and the Energy jtssearch 
and Development Administration have 
concluded that it is generally .cheaper 
to .save a barrel of fuel than to dis- 
cover, extract, refine and retail a new 
barrel. ... 


The United States now uses about 
75 quads of energy each year, (a 
“ quad" means one quadrillion British 
thermal units, enough energy to pro- 
vide every American with almost one 
barret of oiL) Intelligent investments 
in energy-efficient technologies would 
allow us to reduce our fuel consump- 
tion to under . 40 quads with only cos- 
metic changes in. our style of life. 
Without building hew energy facilities, 
we would then have 35 quads of 
energy available for other purposes. 

Society has only a limited amount, 
of capital to invest Major investments 
in one sector of the economy neces- 
sarily foreclose options elsewhere. If 
huge ' streams of capital are channeled 
into directions they would not nor- 
mally flow, other areas must suffer. 

The proposed United States Project j 


■ Ui 



Independence effort would require 
$1 trillion by 1985, four-fifths 1 of 
which would be earmarked for new, 
rather than replacement; facilities. 

Under such a scenario, new energy 
plants would use two-thirds of all 
net capital investment during* that 
period. This would reduce investments 
in industry, agriculture, transportation 
and housing^— all of which provide 
more jobs than do energy facilities. 

All these sectors will require major 
investments if they are to convert to 
more energy-efficient processes. Thus ' 
large-scale investments in new energy 
facilities will guarantee the failure of 
meaningful energy conservation, ' 

Energy from conservation would, be 
cheaper, safer, less environmentally 
disruptive, and more reliable than 
power from new sources. It. would . 


o' 



produce no radioactive wastes or 
bomb-grade materials. And it would 
provide far more jobs.' 

As a general rule, -the more energy- 
intensive a product is, the less labor- 
intensive it tends to be. Services 
(other than transportation) require 
more labor and less energy than do 
physical commodities. Direct pur- 
chases of energy (gasoline. or electri- 
city) proride fewer jobs per dollar 
than anything else one can buy. 

Large cars cost much more than 
small . cars, but inquire . only .slightly 
more labor to produce. A person who 
buys a snail car and spends his sav- 
ings on. anything else will almost cer- . 
thinly be- providing more , jobs- than - 
one' who . buys - a big car. Insulating 
homes provides more jobs than build- 
ing petroleum refineries to produce 
fuel oil, and' the money saved every 




year on fuel bills will provide addi- 
tional jobs when spent oq food, cloth- 
ing; recreation or health care. - 
' To be sure; there are limits to what 
energy conservation . can accomplish. 
However, those limits needn’t be ap- 
proached for at least 25 years. By the 
year 2000, we . may have benign, re- 
newable .energy sources available, or 
we -may have decided not to repeat 
the error of Babel — attempting to 
grow forever. For the next 25 years, 
we should fill our need for new energy 
from the 50 percent of our energy 
budget we currently waste. 

Denis Hayes, who does research on 
international . energy issues at the 
Worldwatch Institute, a private organi- 
zation that studies global problems, is 
author of the forthcoming "Rays of 
Hope: A Global Energy Strategy.” 


m 




The Enchanted Frog 




fiSS —• 


' By Mary Leister 

the bottom of the cornfield two 
rry trees and a maple grow in 
igle, leaning toward one another 
it their heads touch and their 
and branches intermingle. Muiti- 
■oses and green briers with .wicked 
. grow thickly atibot their bases, 
■ampant honeysuckle fills any 
the briers leave unoccupied, 
jots' rather like the ramparts of. 
?epibg Beauty’s castle during: the 
the princess ’lay asleej* but at 
iter' lies, not a bedroom,' but a 
that has been abandoned for 
' years. 

-noreihan a hundred years this 
supplied water for a succession 
■nt families living m the brown 
'two good stone-throws away. 

’■ that it quenched - the thirsts 
.d hands, and 'before that it 
as served both wandering In- 
nd sojourning wild animals 
still a watering, place for small 
Y who creep beneath the thorny 
M but the old house Is tenanted 
r termites, andthe men who till 
a ted fields do so in massive 
es, glass-enclosed and air-con- 
d, and they bring ’ their own . 
- of liquid refreshment in tin- 
aermos jugs; So-no human T6ot 
>t a pathway open to the'spring, 
e growth about it has become 
and more forbidding with every 
; year. 

Kela and I found: ouf vjay 
i 'the. Castle's impenetrable walL 
>re truthfully, Keli'foiznd’the 
id' I followed. - 
a hot August afternoon we 


• turned from the main creek and waded 
a. rivulet that trickled . between .the 
grass-covered, banks of an interesting 
Side channel. At the edge of the pas- 
ture we crept beneath a rusted barbed 
wire fence, crawled almost flat under 
a shield of greenbrier and honeysuckle, 
crushed the. watery stems of a stand 
of jewel weed growing directly in the- 
water, blinked ■ our .eyes and stood^ 
. quite still. in a cave of cool green, 
darkness. ... ...... ' 

v Actually it wasn't dark in there; it 
only seemed so after the burning sun- 
light of the meadow. This place was 
filled with , light — soft, trembling, 
green -washed light — that filtered 
through the leaves. It wfcs not. lofty > 
enough nor vast enough to be jl castle, C 
but It w'as ah airy room, friendly and . 
sheltering. ' , 4 . ' '• • 

We splashed . to the . edge . of the/ 
spring ^ and I reclined against its*” 
mossy banks while TSela gamboled in 
the small pool at the bead of 'the rim- 
.ofL Between the ;spring and the pool 
spmeope had laid; a bridge, a Small 
Openwork construction from .which it 
would be easy to dip ' water pails or 
to .kpeel .for .long cooling-" draughts. ■ 
The bridge had been placed there a 
long time ago. Its Support^ were rotted 
away and it lay with its undersurface 
touching the water. Kela found it a 
great takeoff point for' Splashing 
plunges into the little pool and I dis- 
covered that I could sit on the bank 
with my feet comfortably propped 
against the bridge ;and muse, tor half- 
hours at a time:- ‘ - 

By all rights there,should have been 
mosqUitoeSTuitf fries in so sheltered a 
spot; but there were n'one. This was a 
sanctuary,' a place of joy and solitude 
unbodied by anjfrWBg. 


■<Tr 







' This cool, moist retreat has been the 
secret mecca of our August afternoons. 
I don’t know how many visits we had 
already made, nor for how many of 
those visits I might have overlooked 
the green frog squatting in a frog- 
sized niche' at my ' elbow; but one 
sunny day there . he sat, completely 
unperturbed by either Kela's noisy 
splashing or by my reclining practically 
against him 

A sunbeam shone through a parting 
of The mulberry leaves directly on the 
niche where the green frog sat, warm- 
ing him and glinting on the spots of 
gold' that freckled his green head and 
shoulders. Two brown lines flecked 
with gold dust marked the ridges on 


either, side .of his hack. The lower 
part .of his body, and his aims, and his 
legs as well, were mottled brown, and 
hiS throat was a clear bright yellow. 
He was a pretty fellow, and he sat 
there calmly as a Buddha while. Kela 
played at her watery sports. He was 
still there a half-hour later when we 
crept out beneath the curtain of green- 
briers, and left the spring and the frog 
behind. 

The next day at very nearly the 
same hour we were back at the spring, 
and there was. the frog ..ensconced in 
his niche. And the next day and the 
next day and the next day we were 
there and so was the frog. 1 spoke to 
him each day but he did not answer. 


No motion of mine disturbed him, and 
Kela, * romping and barking in tbe 
water, did not exist. The frog blinked 
his eyes and the pulse in his throat 
pumped- visibly. Otherwise he .did not 
stir. . ' 

On the fifth day, after sitting beside 
him- and making a few unanswered 
conversational remarks for Some min- 
utes, I gently touched him with one 
finger. He did not move. I stroked his 
gold-sprinkled back. He blinked and 
sat on. His skin felt soft and cool to 
my tpiich. Over and over I. stroked his 
sides. Did I imagine it or dicf he pfgss, 
ever so slightly, against my finger? '• 
"Why, this firbg is enchanted!'- I 
thought. "If I lean over, now, and kiss 


r 

r 




him on his flat green nose, he will turn 
into a handsome prince.” 

But I didn’t do it. And the next day 
when Kela and I sought our green- 
lighted retreat, the niche in the bank 
was empty. I checked every inch of 
those mossy banks, and Kela certainly 
explored the water, but the frog was 
not there. 

He never has reappeared, and I keep 
wondering. . . . 

iM974 Miry Leister 

Mary Leister, who lives in Howard 
County, Md., is a naturalist and ele- 
mentary-vchool teacher. This piece is 
from her book of personal narratives, 
,r Wildlings.’’ 


Certainly Not Another Franco— But Not a Lenin, Either 


By C.' L. Sulzberger. 


IS— Madrid’s - Government -- has 
.- ed to Santiago. Carrillo, sec- 
. general- of the Spanish Com- 
i Party, that it will very shortiy 
whether he : w31 be -allowed 
im. openly -and legally to Spain. 
HfeeThere this week for a .Span- 
SspmtHe was most courteously 
sd fry ihe Ambassador, .- al- 
.. "t.Jie ,-and : his- party are .still 
•' : 1 is. xllegaL-but it was- intimated 

- sioiuwiB 'probably be tgfeen at 

- meqti^, Tdeaiay, . . 

' • .'Canilla’s -ddest. son. is .-already 

3 a professor of mathematics at 
iversity of Madrid. Mrs. Canrillo 
. be two younger, sons, wbo 
.ved in Paris for yehrs (original- 
er the' family alias, ofi Giscard) 
icked and ready to ga home, 
ommumst leader says . there is 
-blem for .toem; “but. -they prefer 
it and travel with. him. : -- . 
-odd thing, is tha£,r until last 
. Hwne meetin&. of the. party’s 
!*hber -^central: committee, and 
■ing an East Berlin^ trip, Mr. - 
... o - ha» been secretly in , Spain 
. January, - traveling extensively 
KtferfHig with political- leaders 
.shades,--- 

<sow hie wants 'to' go .homo 
. officially, - He wax last legally : 
tin ks the.cfril War ended;' m 
Except ' for a? months in the 
six months - in tho United 
and about three yeara. in'-lAtin 
a" while' France was - -occup fed 

i Germans, -he has- been based 

,»ver since. From ''1964 he* has 
at on ^ ’Cuban.- passport He 
pent- moire of his 61 years' -in . 
s than in Spain,- - 
says’ .that .^hat . he calls ; “the 
ional government* (referring to : 


the present Spanish administration) 
"claims .we [Cwnmunists} wish to- be 
both, legal and 1 a±, the same: time to 
work m .dandestinity. Bjit even bp#0re 

• we are officially -legalized we want 
to demonstrate our desire - to -work 

. - openly— -al thou gh - that ■ might- mean 
ending up jn -Rrison: -We wisfa- to lude 
neither our ideas nor our presence,” 
According .to .-Mr. ■Cairaio, that 

. "presence” is : far more extensive than 
Madrid’s security apparatus realizes. 

• He says 34 of the -35 members of the 
party's executive committee. (Spanish 
Communism’s equivalent of a polit- 

: bum) :are now in Spain, tmder- 


groundr — including himself over the 
.last six months. Only the party presi- 
dent (an honorary title), the famous 
Dolores -Ibamiri (La Pasionaria) is 
absent. 

.. Tbe secretary general is ah agree- 
able,, homely, bespectacled man from 
Asturias . who gives the impression 
of speaking frankly. He tends to 
blame; Henry Kissinger -for provoking 
the recent political crisis which forced 
out not only- the unmourned Prime 
Minister Carlos r Arias Navarro, a 
Franco relkv but < also the modern, 
liberal-minded Foreign Minister Jos6 
Maria da Areilza, (Count Motrico) 


and friteri or Minister Manuel Fraga 
Iribarne. During the course of an ex- 
tensive conversation Mr. Carrillo made 
the' following statements: 

(1) If the Communists are eventual- 
ly admitted: to a coalition cabinet 
“we are ready to get out if we lose 
elections — just like any other party. 
When .1 speak of democracy I mean 
Western democracy. I consider uni- 
versal suffrage is the criterion. Z 
said this in front of Brezhnev. We 
don't want power by force. I am a 
Spaniard, not a Russian. I certainly 
don’t want to be another Franco but 
it would be impossible for me to be 


. a Lenin. I believe in the ultimate 
goal of convergence in ideologies. 
The West must become more social- 
ist but the East must become more 
democratic." ^ 

(2) "We [Communists) believe tbe 
King should continue as head of state 
until a constituent assembly makes a 
final decision. If its majority approves 
of a monarchy for democratic Spain, 
we will accept that decision although, 
quite frankly, we prefer a republic.” 

(3) Until there is an international 
accord terming tip g foreign bases in 
Europe, Mr. Carrillo endorses' contin- 
ued U. S. bases in Spain and a bilateral- 


Retiring New York City’s Debt 


, . By Leon A- Katz 

' A great many solutions have been 
-made -over the last year for bringing- 
New York City back 'to financial 
health: Some have beqn useful,, sotpe, - 
not so. helpful. But alntost afi erf them 
-overlook a key method of redudiig 
the city’s- tax . levy eaqjeiBe- budget: 
New York "City ? imist begin' retiring • 
its debt -r ■ . ' : 

The city’s animal service on long- . 
term debt for interest mad principal * 
payments is .41.75 billion.. If. the 
permanent debt were; reduced $3.1 
billion over the ! rifeit three years ' 
.(assuming a 10 percent' rate (or inter- 
est and principal),- ' our '- annual tax - 
levy expense budget service payment . 
would "■ be. radiiced by, $310 iniHiao 
during that’ period; i or S100 million 
annually. That money could be used 
for the essential services . the; city ' 
must provide to retairi the people and . 
businesses it needs to 'suivivei' . 
-rHcwr cairthe city- afford -to" retire 


debt? 1 By suspending or. deferring for 
■ -three -years the $lv057,552 ' it con- 
tributes -annually ^'municipal pension 
plans," and spending- it instead on 
retiring long-term debt . (This proposal 
does not include health or medical 
payment plans, and collective-bargain 
ing agreements would ■ have . to be 
modified by mutual agreement In order 
to . effectuate the agreement and safe- 
guard -the benefits employees have 
earned in their pensions.). . 

There are obvious benefits to every- 
body- in this proposal. Permanent 
liquidation of debt would immediately 
produce savings in debt service pay- 
ments large enough to proride long- 
range help for New York. There would 
be no loss of Federal or state match- 
ing funds. The peed for large-scale 
dismissals would end, as would the 
pressure for increasing taxes and fees 
on businesses, which stimulate their 
exodus from the city. 

Eerhaps most important, debt liqui- 
dation and reduction of annual debt 
sdrvibe would be" a dear sgnal fo the 


business com&unity, 'including the 
bankers and lenders, that New York 
City has begun permanent resolution 
of. its problems. , 

We have entered a new era in New 
York City, one that requires the co- 
‘ operation and understanding of the 
_ people who make the mortgages, the 
people who underwrite our securities, 
and the people who rate our bonds. 

The- program 2 have outlined need 
not mean.-* drop in pensions. , Any 
municipal employee would have the 
right to advance through a*personaI 
• loan to the city from his own funds 
the amount of the city’s pension con- 
tribution. At retirement, the loan (with 
interest) would be repaid through* an 
additional retirement .benefit 
■ Some employees could retire after 
23 years of service, but with a 20- 
year contribution program. Still other 
employees might wish to retire after 
20 years with a 17-year pension con- 
tribution. And any employee -who 
foregoes these alternatives would have 
a greater take-home pay, since there 


would be ho contribution required 
during this three-year period. 

- Ibis program 'is not intended to 
be all-inclusive. Any measures that 
stabilize our .existing revenues, stimu- 
late our economy, retain our middle 
class and businesses, 'and afford 
sanitation, transportation and other 
services, would be welcome. But to 
succeed, such steps must avoid in- 
creased debt, interest and related 
problems. That is why bankruptcy, 
payment stretchouts or ' even' a new 
debt moratorium cannot work. * 
Unless our town pays all its debts, 
bur city will 'die. And the sooner we 
pay them, the better, 

Leon A. Katz ' represents the 24th 
District, Brooklyn, on the New York 
City Council ■ 


FOREIGN AFFAIRS 

alliance — unless Washington tries to 
“interfere" in domestic politics. "Only 
when the Russians get their installa- 
tions out of Czechoslovakia, for ex- 
ample, should the United States get 
its [own installations] out of Spain,” 

(4 y Mr. Carrillo is “entirely for 
Spain's admission to the European 
Common Market We must enter. We 
belong in Europe and by that I mean 
Western Europe, Spain cannot join' 
Comecon [Russia’s mirror image].”. 

(5) He agrees to Spain's application 
for NATO membership "on condition 
that NATO doesn't try to veto Com- 
munist participation in our govern- 
ment or otherwise interfere in internal 
affairs. -NATO must change in' this r 
political sense, not as a Western mili- 
tary defense organization. I think my 
attitude is identical with that of 
Italy’s Berlinguer.” 












Murder T rial Gag Order 
Puzzling to Other Judges 


■ By TOM GOLDSTEIN I 

A New York State Supremefcoverage, Justice Evans may 
Court justice who this week well have drawn more atten- 
limited press coverage of a don to the trial than it ordl- ' 
murder trial has puzzled his narily would have .received, 
colleagues on the bench and “It’s just what he didn’t want,” 
lawyers who regularly practice one of his colleagues said, 
in criminal courts. Such gag orders are relative- 

Just as puzzling, a half dozen jy uncommon. The validity of 
fudges and lawyers said y ester- imposing gag orders on people 
day, was the refusal of the within the legal system has 
Justice, Martin Evans, to ex- never been directly ruled upon 
plain why he had prohibited ^ the United States Supreme 

the defense and prosecution Co ^ m , 

lawyers and court staff mem- Ontewnly, the reason for 
hers "from discussing with the fndi an order- is to assure 
press the murder trial of a a defendant's right to a 
member of Black Muslim mos- f “r. tool is not jeopardized by 
que in Harlem.' ■ prejudicial publicity. 

Nor could they understand Spectators Calm 
why Justice Evans, who is But .all ' those interviewed 
known among judges and law- yesterday said they saw no 
yers for meting out long sen- danger, once the jury was 
traces, refused to let reporters picked and directed not to 
in his court in Manhattan see read, about the case, that they 
a transcript of a partially in- would be influenced by press 
audible tape recording that was reports, 
introduced into evidence. Courtroom observers said 

It was not clear to them spectators to the trial were 
whether this action was a calm and well-behaved, re- 
proper exercise of his discre- discing the likelihood that they 
tion, a simple lack of courtesy somehow would _ influence the 
or an improper abridgement of jury by something they had = 
the public's right to know what read. ' - 


r * “• 

-ii> . j 






BySELWYNBAAB 

misang witness in thelin which Mr. Carter and a co- 


-ji* -r 


murder case voluntarily. 


1 traced to life in prison. 






- . Associated Press 

HURT IN HOLDUP ^ATTEMPT: Guy Daulby being aided by passers-by after he was 
struck by a speeding car near Amsterdam Avenue and 81st Street The men in the car 
— two off-duty housing policemen delivering $20,000 to a check-cashing service — were 
fleeing from an armed man who tried to hold them up. Mr. Daulby was admitted to 
Roosevelt Hospital with a fractured leg. 


peered at the Passaic County, ^ jg74 t jjf. Bello andanoth- 
NJ, Prosecutor’s office in er main prosecution witness re- 
Paterson yesterday, and . a war- canted their testimony that Mr. 
rant for his arrest- was quickly Carter and Mr. Artis were the- 
droppecL gunmen who had fatally shot 

A spokesman for theProse- three personsin a Paterson tav- . 
cntor, Burrell L Humphreys, ^ . 

said that the witness, Alfred P. The recantations helped win 
Bello, Indicated he would a new trial for Mr. Carter,- now 
spond to future .subpoenas” to 39^ and Mr. Artis. 30. Since his 
testify. Last- Tuesday, toe recantation, -Mr. Bello has giv- TT- 

Prosecutor's office said' Mr- en statements to state mvesti- ~ alfwa p Bp 
B ello ha I disappeared after ne gators placing Mr. Carter and . 

declined to be a witness again Artis M Hie scene of the » ,”Li5 0ra p ' 1 ' 
in the controversial case and crime, although he said two to 1874, at £ 
was being sought by investiga- Qfli er persons were toe tollers, recanted prei 
tors. • ■ a spokesman for -Mr.; Hum- mony on the 1 

„ Ronald G, Manno, the assst- pjj-gyg said, the Prosecutor’s of- --'- ■ 
ant prosecutor who announced floe jnfrfxt seek new indict-T ' : 

that Mr. Bdlo had been found, ^ jjjj. Carter, a former with the selectio 

refused to say whore Mr. BeCo leading middleweight .boxer, tial jury. . 
had been or if he might be held ^ Artis as accomplices j u dg e March 
m protective custody. rather than as the gunmen.' Mr. ** a -*—r_ 

Mr. Bella, who is 33 yeas testimony vrauld be con- 

old,- was temporarily detamed vital for- conviction re e ard ^ the pi 

in- protective custody _ m 1966, ^ ^ ^ the assurance of i 

when . he was ■ an -• important guaranteed to 

prosecution witness at the trial a development yes- selection” of a 

. .t - terday, a Passaic County judge jury. The judg 

- w ‘ - . declined to reajppose an order Carter that her 


wnen oe w® au- ^Iranme. 
prosecution witness ai the trial J T _ 


- «*»<-' Court Orders Ketunding ot Unauthorized Kent bases gSSSS 

No Rationale seen Evans's refusal to let reporters ^ : , — — - ■ : — r— ? ^ oo the trial, which is scheduled are black, have 

said Se d^ed th toe eX Siri7t liC ^ ^ By ARNOLD H. LUBASCH presided over a trial of the mentis claims, toe company fPtaSVSf “l^th^MgV William J. for* toe*^*® 

in c rimina l trial worit"! can scratchy and indistinct tape a Federal judge has ruled sulC ^ Apr ^ m . a dea ~ ‘ r ^ :harged approxmrately - Federal E^momic Stabiliza- Marchese, admonished Mr. was motivated" 

see no rationale." Like others 0 f a call summoning the police that Nehrtag Brothers, a major aon filed late Thursday m 1,000 tenants more than $250,- Si r Carter against engaging in any dice on .th 

interviewed yesterday, this law- to the Harlem mosque. real-estate management com- Federal District Court in Man- 000 'in rents, for an average 2z? t " u * 1 cuaum-tuua. activrties jnight interfere Prosecutor’s off 

yer insisted on anonymity. Jurors were allowed to con- pany in New York City, raised hattan that Nehring Brothers of about S250 a tenant, al- “T „ . . . ' . _ -■ a ' - 

.Justice Evans has refused to suit the transcript, and toe apartment rents in violation of was responsible for - violating though individual amounts- t m „ /' , . . - _ , , 

discuss any aspect of the case judge indicated it was for their Federal regulations and must toe rent regulations of the rn If [ mn . [ri . rah ; v “ Seven-Year Sentence Levied CctpeCodh 

this week, and efforts yester- eyes alone, without saying why give refunds with interest to Federal Economic Stabilization co “l fl ^ary OTnsiaeraoiy. to Jrau^ W73, appbed .... , 

day to -reach him home or in this was so. the overcharged tenants or pay program imposed by the Nixon „ e deosion by Judge Knapp New York City only to apa rt- for Wisconsin U. BOmoing ForNtld- 

his chambers were unsuccess- “There's no confidentiality or a penalty of three times the Administration. . cal " 011 “~ r ^ ber ’ * ^ et *“ moit not covered by the city's — - - - : 

ful. anything like that to it," one amount to the GovenunenL Averaee to $250 ■ “ program of rent control and . spkoi to me kw «a«ai s^io-mc 

Lawyers for Lewis 1 7X Du- lawyer said. “Remember, at the The company’s rent over- * ^ agreement between the govern- rent s tabi li zati on. MILWAUKEE, Aug. 6 — David tritro Mi 

press, who has been charged time it was broadcast over the charges for about 1,000 tenants A spokesman for Nehiaig ment and Nehrrag Brothers on Under a vacancy decontrol $. Fine. 24 years old, a con- e • 
with toe fatal 1972 shooting of air for all with the right radio in Manhattan and the Bronx Brothers said yesterday that tne amount of mony to be paid i aw that went into effect in f pacAr | mrticiDant in a Univer- ' 

Police Officer Philip W. Car- equipment to hear.” total more than $250,000, ac- company officials could not to toe tenants. Mew York in July 1971, apart- clared Nation; 

diflo, spent yesterday — a day The transcript issue became cording to the Federal Govern- comment on the judges deci- If an agreement cannot be m ents were decontrolled with l ; °*L s,, Day, and Cap. 

toe court was in reqess— pre- moot, at least for the time meat, which sued Nehring sion because they had not yet reached between the opposing their present tenants moved Seashore offic 

paring court papers challenging being, on Thursday as large Brothers almost four years ago could not determine sides, the magistrate will hear oatj hut the decontrolled apart- tiSavHCv ine for whaf 1 

Justice EvanS’s gag order. portions of it were read into for refunds and penalties. whether to appeal it, evidence m the case and then me nt came under the Federal i rv,,,J H„j op • ^ 

Ironically, by limiting press the official court record Judge Whitman Knapp, who According to the Govern- report back to Judge Knapp on regulations. - C ° Urt Judge co ™ ro " tation 

— — .. "m how. much money the company Co ■_. Myron l. txoruon. protesting the 

” must pay. . The Internal Revenue Service The bombing came at the L atainsrn 

Stavisk v Bill Given Its Dav in Court LUNCH PROGRAM A Case From Phase following nume^^^omplaints I prot^° m^emrat^aSoS ^toe lts beaches. 


Stavisky Bill Given Its Day in 


A Case From Phase 
Judge Knapp ruled 


investigated Nehring. Brothers height of toe anti-Vietnam war aDamsc 
following numerous complaints protest movement across the its beaches, 
that from tenants in buildings man- country, largely centered on A group ca! 


TPRMkll Nehring Brothers must refund aged by toe company. college campuses. The explo- the Free Bead 

Bv DEN A KLEIMAN most mixed-up, incomprehensi- this, but even he was over- IJjniiLui/ DulUiii/ overcharges to toe tenants} jhe investigation resulted in sion, which demolished a phys- a free Beach 

TsmJl™ f«r No™, Vnrir b,e 3aw 1 ^ve seen in 30 years ruled." : “with interest at the legal }th e suit filed by the United ics building resulted in toe cea-shore’s ' 

T 3 '*7 ers L IOr as a legislative expert" In reply, Mir. Lavinsky said „ rate and would have to pay a j states Attoniev’a office against death of a graduate student, „ _ 

and the Board of Education, Mr. Richland also argued that that according to the New York Closing of Sites for Children penalty triple the amount of I Nehring Brothers, whit* man- Robert Fassnacht. ™™ u i, - 

who are usually on toe same the Legislature erred in declar- State Constitution, the Legisla- . Ir¥f _ !r r e a „- overcharges that were not ages 350 buildings with Mr. Fine, .who was a Wis- 

side, were adversaries yester- m g tbe bill a law. After Gover- tore can determine ite own pro- unfair, uroup oays refunded. more than 14.OOO apartments, loonsin student at the time of 

dav in Sunreme Court nor Carey vetoed the legisla- ceedings. He said that the $115 The company violated the ; the -explosion, is from Wil- 

m is rri n t-inr tion, the Assembly overrode his million was only 0.0088 percent ^ Federal regulations by deriding , mington, Del. Beach “.N01 

veto immediately, but it re- of the city's annual budget and By CHARLAYNE HUNTER “Ln g0 od faith" to follow the Zambia Frees 15 Students Another participant in the t ^ an ^, 2,000 T 
t ' 0n ' two votes before the that the legislators had decided Some black sponsors of the “erroneous advice” of M. Bruce LUSAKA, Zambia, Aug. 6 bombing, Karleton Armstrong, showed up. 1 


'with interest at the legalise suit fiied by toe United ics building resulted in the sea-shore’s 


^ By CHABLAYNE HUNTER ^goorfaii” To ^ 7UKTS Zambia Frees 1 5 Students psrticipant in the than 2.000 

^ , I uired two votes before toe that the legislators had decided Some black sponsors of the “erroneous advice” of M. Bruce) LUSAKA, Zambia, Aug. 6 bombing, Karleton Armstrong, showed up. I 
Senate overrode it This, Mr. that education was the "scape- Summer Food Service for Needy Solomon, its general counsel! (Reuters)— Fifteen students who of Madison^ is serving a 23- seashore, w 
mnn erhiwii wii R> c bland contended, violated goat” and had been placed to Children charged yesterday that and former deputy city rent were detained in January after year sentence m the Wisconsin re< ? n r^. u I - m P 

nnw nmnd Federal rules, which dictate accept more of the city’s fiscal they were being unfairly penal- commissioner, according to the anti-Govemment demon stra- State Prison .' ' ' rade bathing 

an flridifhinaK si f i after a veto a legislative cuts than any other agency. ized because of abuses by judge, but he said this was "no tions at the University of Zam- Two other aDeged suspects ' the other wa 

ritv rnmnmrinn rniinw.1 ' C body may only consider an "The Legislators were grown others. They asked a voice in defense" against the suit bia were freed two days ago, in toe bombing are still at-large. . Tius > rtar 
narri Rirhinnd 5ssue once - . men,” he' shouted, waving his next year's policy decisions re- The issue in the complex civil Home Affairs Minister Aaron They are Leo Burt, of Havers- tbe seashore 

that the* eitv nwri th* sritnlu “^ rom . 1844 on, it’s been ac- arms, “they were intelligent garding the program. case goes back to 1971, when Milner told Parliament yester- fond. Pa., and Mr. Armstrong's Lawrence C. 

svstpm Tinthinp 1 cepted in the United States men, not a bunch of idiot chil- ■ Representatives of a newly the Nixon Administration im- day. brother; Dwight,- ' • - .- [ will be enfm 

system nothing. Congress that when a bill is dren.” formed predominantly black • - ' ■ I - : 

. „ it lSj 5?““ vetoed by the President there "You’re so excited,” Justice eroup, toe Concerned Sponsors . 

?an «nly vote,” said Mr. Gellinoff intemiped with a of Central Brooklyn, said their * 


. j — “*jr wk - **•*•* '““i «“*“ ucuiuvni intemiped Wiui a UI u;utiai juuumvu, boiu uieu i 

anfirinns R 5 htandL J ®*“ Qurncey smile. “You must have a lot summer-lunch sites were being) 

^ Adaras once to* 1 to appe® 1 of children in public school." closed for fading to meet suchl 

JS2 jS^AbrSham J. Gri! ;:r "* regulations as providing six 

linoff’ said he would n^ed a year fs Added to Sentence Attorney's office agreed SflUL rad ’ ^for 

10 ^ in Abuse of Menta( Patients ^ *** °" 

-vB-^n^Aus. . irs -»nas 

eduration ^biU wWch reouiras (UPI)_Martha Garris * wfao has *bat one of her boarders had The major excesses rad 

that toe citv soend no less than servecl OTe y ear of a one-to-10- died in Suffolk when, it was abuses that are currently under 

21.46 percent of its expense y 1 ear sentence for mistreating alleg ed, he die d in Port Kent, investigation, including kick- 

budget on schools, should be former mental patients who * c Vo .„ n 

enforced by toe court Mr. La- lodged at her boarding houses *A°J 5 Years G,ven S,a y e . r tiS? Ja 

Satio™Mr a was 611 ■ additional one- Of Suspect in Knight Death &’^foori&mXmraL 

Richland contend^ that it wa<? year sentence today, which is „ T “ _ "Now that this is the first 

too incomprehensible to put to nin concurrently with her ^TO^N' Aug - 6 ^ year that there's any apprecia- 
into practice present sentence. —A Philadelphia man was sen- ble amount of black people in- 

Assemblyman ■ Lennart P. . ^ °‘ nl ‘ !*“f 10 ^ 22^" 

Stavisky, Democrat of Queens, 15 c . UIT * nU y < S* e whJ . e ® he unpnsonment today for man- 

first drew up toe bill last fall h ? r 1975 conviction for slaughter in toe death of a sus- „to wotc $It P 35^.£uS£ 
in response to complaints that kidnapping former patients who ^ ^ UecEmb a slajnng ^ vSTto & blad?^- 

tbe city school budget had been were on welfare and unpnson- 0 f a news- '’ 

cut in far greater proportions mg them mth little food and pap*, heir. Ser Mr Campbell nor 

to its share of the city budget inadequate heat m a viUa she Joseph Polucci. 28 years old, 0 thi membere ofSponsora 
than the budgets of other agen- in K® nt * N -J- was sentenced in Camden group could provide Prerise 

cies. The bill's other sponsor The sentence unposed today county Court by Judge Leon ££? ^ toe^^nmnber^f sitfs 
was Senator Roy M. Goodman, by Suffolk County Court Judge Wingate. Mr. Polucci had ad- SSsored bv b^cta that had 
Republican of Manhattan. John J. Jones stemmed from mitted driving a car to toe althoueh Mr 

Governor Carey vetoed the bill, Mrs. Garris’s guilty plea on Camden County community of camobell said that "about 40 
but last April 14 the Legislature April 8 to one count of at- pine HiD, where Isaias Melen- to 50 nercent” did not have sft- 
» ... o' a to found shot rt death ^ SL «d hSd bSS 

Tne bill is so silly, so raar- welfare check. Dec. 12, five days after the dosed M a result 

ticulate, so foolish,” Mr. Rich- When this plea was accepted Knight murder, of which two r\ P ctanlpv Camnbell «rfatp 
land told the judge. “It is the by the court, the Suffolk Dis- other men have been convicted. c O niinator oE the program for 

the State Education Depart- 
ment, said that about 800 or 
the 4,700 local sites had been 
closed— “a lot of them in 
Brooklyn.” 

But he said the Department 
did not keep an ethnic break- 
down of either the sponsors or 
toe vendors who supplied the 
food to toe sites. 

Representative Elizabeth 
HoLtzman, Democrat of Brook- 
lyn, whose investigations and 
testimony about toe program 
initially revealed widespread 
abuse, said yesterday that she 
did not have statistics on the 
ethnic breakdown of toe spon- 
sors and thought, in fact, that 
it was “irrelevant." 

Miss Holtzman said that 
many of the programs she had 
examined had "claimed on 
paper" to have room to feed 
the children, when "part of toe 
problem” was that they did not 
Disagreement Voiced 
Members of toe sponsors 
group disagreed with such 
views as Miss Holtzman’s dur- 
ing' a news conference that 
began at the Bedford-Stuyves- 
ant Restoration Corporation ■ on 
Fulton Street and ended at the 
Rose of Sharon Church, where 
the third shift of children were 
being fed sandwiches, fruit and 
milk. 


a of Central Brooklyn, said theiri 




hmfi 


ti 

lets the 

estmark 


Here’s how the current Simmons report 
ranks upscale magazine audiences in the 
key education category. 


land told the judge. Tt is the [by the court, the Suffolk Dis- other men have been convicted. 


•W'rSv'X 1 


NewYorkTimes 


Total Coll 

Graduate 


- ‘ wV' ’ ■*«’*-. 
wv.wia,-: - . 


1,862,0 


1 IL 

j 




< * • r "* r * v- . ■ 


^ -fifty 


Ws&mr m 


mm*? 








A5HCUIed Pros? 

CLEANUP CONTINUES as bulldozer removes some of the mod from the path of flood 
that struck the Big Thompson River Canyon last Saturday. Searchers recovered more 
than a dozen bodies from area south of Drake, Colo, as search for missing continued. 


Meanwhile, . Miss Holtzman 
charged late yesterday that 
State Educational Department 
officials had "impeded" efforts 
by the United States Depart- 
ment of Agriculture to follow 
on state investigations of 




officials at the State Depart- 
ment of Education, following 
the late-afternoon release by 
Mrs. Holtzman’s office, were 
unsuccessful . 


The Wall Street Journal 

1,785,( 

The New Yorker * ~ 

1,332,( 

Business Week 

¥ 

1,163, C 

Fortune 

965, C 

Harper ’s/Atlantic 

760, C 

New York Magazine 

664, 0 


®JjciN T cttr Jlork 

So special it leads a life of its own ... all week long. 


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' s Summer Crowd 
And So Has theTown 


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Windsor Hotels luxurylandmaric fat South Fallsfaarg, in the CatskOte, is now 
anced tranung center for teachers of the Transcendental Meditation movement. 


By KENNETH A. BRIGGS 
■ • Spcdkl toTheNevTorkTiaai 

SOUTH FALLSBURG, N. Y, 
—•Tfae flowing sans of In- 
dian women swirl cm the 
sidewalks of Main Street and 
Hasidic Jews in blade suits 
and broad-brim hats cluster 
• on the comers, chattering 
in Yiddish. > 

The Windsor Hotel has 
been taken over by Tran- 
scendental Meditation; the 
DeVille Hotel has been con- 
verted into a Hindu ashram, 
or retreat;' Orthodox Jews 
.have purchased- severe! bun- 
galow colonies and hotels. 

And businesses all over 
town are changing inven- 
tories, hours of business and 
even their names and styles 
to appeal to a new clientele. 

The soft, leafy days of mid- 
summer have returned to this 
idyllic Sullivan County re- 
seat in the Catsldlls, hut the 
waves of summer visitors 
that have engulfed South 
. Fallsburg, FaJlsburg. Liberty 
and other neighboring com- 
munities this year are no 
longer exclusively middle- 
class or secular. 

Large Summer Population 

"It certainly is a spec- 
tacle,** James D. Hozhauer, 
the South Fallsburg admin- 
istrative assistant, said one 
day recently as he looked 
out on a Main Street crowd- 
‘ ed with Indians, Orthodox 
Jews and blacks and whites 
from the local community. 

“I guess people are at first 
afraid of anything strange, 
and the religious people were 
very different,” he went on. 
"You used to hear deroga- 
tory remarks because some 
thought they all looked life* 
weirdos and crazies. 


JBHT 

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Followers of Mntomanda, a Hindu gum, reflect « shrioe at .heir ashraro-tte DeVille 


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■ “But as our people have 
got to know them the 
strangeness has gone away.” 
The dramatic change in 
the make-up of the visitors 
---the population swells from 
9,000 to 85,000 in summer 
— results in part from the ef- 
forts of religious and self- 
improvement groups to 
advantage of land bargains 
created by a slump in the 
resort industry. 

The new groups are well- 
mannered. law-abiding, un- 
obtrusive and to a large ex- 
tent preoccupied with their 
own pursuits. Thus, they are 
viewed by regular residents 
as model citizens. 

The influx of the new 
groups has been taking place 
over the last several years, 
and so the impact on the ; 
community’s character has 
not been abrupt or resented. 
The only real friction . has 1 
arisen over pr op erty taxes, 
with many religious and edu- 
cational groups obtaining ex- 
emptions in towns with 
shrinking tax bases. 

“This year, it seems like 
half the community comes 
from a religions group,” said 
Rita Baiiien, the Town Clerk. 

In South Fallsburg, Ortho- 
dox and Ultra-Orthodox Jews, 
including Hasidic sects, have 
purchased several bungalow 
colonies and hotels that for- 
merly were the preserves of 
high-living summer visitors 
from the city. 

A Hindu guru. Mutt an tan- 
da, has rented the entire De- 
Ville Hotel for the summer 
as an ashram for 300 of his 
followers, and the former 
Windsor Hotel, a luxury 
landmark, has been pur- 
chased by- the Transcendental 
Meditation movement as an 
advanced training center for 
teachers. 

The effects on local busi- 
ness are quickly apparent by 
strolling down , Main Street 
and talking with proprietors. 

Stephen Rosen says the es- 
tablishment of the ashram 
was “just the little push” he 
needed to open a health food 

store. 

Adam’s Pizza is no ordi- 
nary parlor. It was opened by 
four of the guru’s followers 
on June 7 at precisely 8:27 i 
AJh. to take advantage of I ] 


Som e thing Afoot (It’s Punishable) 




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sat. ,i?nv '.uAa 



fi ■ , . . .. Tta New Tlmcs/Doo Mown Qurlu 

Street stencils, such as this, for example, are eyecatching but Illegal 


3Si<Hc Jews pursue rel^bus' StutBes outdoors, at Camp Shalva, one faf tfae Hasidic centers in the flatelrlfi? Continued on Page 46, Column I 


By MORRIS KAPLAN 
It pays to advertise, espe- 
cially if it costs no more than 
the price of a stencD, a little 
paint and a brush wielded 
by a pitchman in the still of 
the night. 

The sales pitch is aimed at 
passers-by, of course, to 
steer them to a movie — even 
a wholesome one — or a 
“massage parlor,” a peep- 
show emporium with 'live 
nude girls,” a restaurant or a 
live politician,/ 

It is the kind of advertis- 
ing that -.you can wipe your 
feet on, or that traffic. and 
the weather eventually. wOl 
erase, since the message is 


stenciled at the crosswalks 
where pedestrian' movement 
is heaviest 

And it Is all illegal, in vio- 
lation of the city's Adminis- 
trative Code and punishable 
by a $10 fine for each of- 
fense .or 10 days in jaiL .' 

Jimmy Carter’s advance 
men are among the many 
violators. Nearly a month has 
passed since the Democratic 
Presidential candidate ap- 
peared before a crowd in 
front of the Americana Hotel, 
a crowd that was. pulled to- 
gether. in part, by the follow- 
ing stenciled message: 

"Meet Jimmy Carter Sat 


LfJ 


ulty Panel 


charges Z News Summary and. Index 


■fya'T 

Pit** 


■t *■'< * * v 


'fied Credits 


tp Nfw York Time* 

LE. L. I, Aug. 6— 
t of the C. W. Post 
mg Island -Umver- 
tay that a faculty 
mittee would be 
thin “a week to 10 
.cide how to l deal 
Teged scheme in 
ty. members .were 
✓ -;for courses that 
rasr taken. 


SATURDAY, AUGUST 7,1978 i , 

'The Major Events of the Day 


The Other News 

Questions °Sd answers on n* ni •***? 0U £ consUIered opinion that there is no reason 

strife in Leban“iT See 2 tune for anyone to cancel their plans to enjoy a 

Israeli says Leb^on war ZSfiZZL * ° r * ?“**£*** to ' Penney lvania."~-Dr. Leonard 

balks peace talk* jSS?®! th L Secretary of Health, dis- 

Talk of Nisfeiyama; the Ta- * — — — ■ 

naka scandal. - Page 3 “Gus,” a Disney film, on local Jets to give Buttle a <rtarf 


Quotation of the Day 


International 

South African police riot squads opened fire 
in Soweto 1 Yesterday in an attempt to break 
up crowds of youths who roamed the black 
township, attacking cars, buses and triins 
in a continuing. effort4o keep black workers - 
from their jobs ^ Johannesburg. On thetfaird 


cently in the labor force, at work or looking 
for work. Most of the increase in unemploy- 
ment was among people who have been out 
of work for fewer than five weeks, which 
includes new job seekers. [1:8.1 
. . The Senate passed the longest and most 
complicated tax bill in two decades last 


iiuui uicu juub ui iiuuaimcMjuig, yu ujc umu ‘7= r M > ** * ™ twu mww c j jaau 

day of disturbances, the official toll-wps 4'? nighL Among its major provisions, the bill 
dead and 30 wounded A'hatfohal pbUce alert keeps the 1975 tax cuts intact for both indi- 


.. /^/ eiit, Dr. Edward J. 
1 lfi the college had 
I t Q* > Investigation and 
** . its -.findings over 

committee, in 
*with.-lhe standard 
1 of: the/ American 
bf- Uuiyersity Pro- 
* ‘ .. ■ 

>ty fa the'appropri- 
make, de t e r m ma? 
4 ^.ulty matters,” Dr. 

alleged - scheme; 
bere in- the gr^d- 


was ordered following reports of arson and 
stone-throwing from widely .scattered other 
townships. [Page 1, Column 2.] 

Hie International 1 ' Red Cross halted its 
rescue operation at the Palestinian camp of 
Tell Zaatar in Lebanon when hundreds of 
.people-swarmed out of the -camp toward -the 
Red Cross trucks and- were fired upon by 


keeps the 1975 tax cuts intact for both Indi- 
viduals and . businesses, reduces the - estate 
tax and provides a tax credit against a small 
portion of the cost of higher education. Tfae 
bill now goes to a Senate-House conference 
committee; which . will attempt to compro- 
mise the big differences between the Senate 
and House versions of the bUL [1:6-7.] 

There were two more deaths caused by 
the outbreak of the mysterious respiratory 


snipers. [1:3-4.] ™ e outbreak of the mysterious respiratory 

Shah Mohammed Riza’Pahlevi denied that 

Tran waa having in handling a Med ^ ™?^atOrs increased their 


Iran was having difficulties in handling a 
vast- number of- modem weapons from the 
.United States and told American reporters 


efforts to find a chemical or poison as the 
possible origin of the Hines. In diagnheing 
tfae illness, Dr. Leonard Ba chman, the Peno- 


that Washington most {aonthiue.to seH arms ' 

lent . of ' education * to his country or risk instability and war in . + more 

>:have been even '--the Middle E^L [1:4.1 . ' " " andnonspeofic Jbflke symptoms, 


4 '.have b^en given 
■eir colleagues ior 
' . bad never taken. ' 
. 1 * rangernent .would 
,.2ty membar who 
to advance 

viaaid that- the. col-. ' 

. /the State Eduea- 
^it and; the npi- 
s&. inqniiy into- the 
te when the mves- ' 
‘'a .twa weeks flgo. 
mt .confirmed re*, 
■public yesterday, 
half dozen faculty 
/ H Jbeen implicated 
. vesfigation, but Tie 
^name them. Dr. 

'that -two [faculty 
' I tite dean of- the 
.cation department . , 
^ since the invest]- • 
i, but ‘ would not . 
r their action? : 
m the iavestiga- 


the Middle East [1:4.1 ' " " “r 

. , . . . - and narrowed the indications to a tempera- 

V ^er.na»« reami* turt of-102 degrees and em^h, or a fever 
nations, Vietnam ana paitod agreed to X-ray evidence of pneumonia in -any 
e^Wish diploimtiC; relations. Tfae agreement . person who had been associated with the 
completes .Vietnam’s diplomatic reconcilia- American Lesion Convention in PhHadelohia 


tion with non-Communist nations in South- 
east Aria.-The agreementincludes a nmnher 
of commitments relating to air routes; trade 
. and' repatriation of Vietnamese refugees But. 
there was no mention of the principal, de- 
mand that Thai military leaders had In- 
sisted -on— that yietn^i giarmrtee-that a 


last month- [1^-7.] . 

Metropolitan 

... .Top New York City offidals.;began inten- 
sive. negotiations with unlon leaders in an- 
other attempt tff settle the dispute over lay- 
offs that touched off a walkout by 18,000 


. . . r . : — ^ — p , — — iwn MmvuiA* wu (« irnuiuuir. uj xo,vuu 

would give no miEtaiy aid or advice, to Com- . • nonmedical employees in all municipal hospi- 
-mnnist insurgents in Thailand. [-1^4.3 . . . . : tals. Pickets were becoming more militant 
Gregor Fiatigorsky^ the cello ' virtuoso and there- were attempts to turn away ambu- 
wfaose only . peers as master of the. instru- . *nces bringing patients to the city hospitals. 


mem were.MMo -Casals and : tostislav Ros- 
tropovkdi, died at Ms home in Los' Angeles 
at-.the age~of 73. He had been ill for a year 


and there- were attempts. to turn away ambu- 
lances bringing, patients to the city hospitals. 
The’ city ambulances were then ordered by 
the Health and Hospitals .Corporation to 
take patients to private hospitals Instead and 
only to municipal hospitals in cases of ex- 
treme eniergqpcy. EM J 
_ .Abercrombie & Frtch, a chain of nine sport- 


*f!y 


' since the investi- National • , , . 

1 , but would not _ .Abercrombie & Frtch, a chain of nine sport- 

r their action? : ' . The Labor Department said that the. na- . mg goods and apparel stores, announced that 
m the investiga- -tional unemployment rate rose substantially* -it would file a voluntary petition Monday for 
: in July to.7.8 percent of the total labor, force reorganization under, the Chapter XI provi- 

to clearly state despite a big- increase, in the number of. peo« aon of the Federal Bankruptcy Act. Two 

tovol^i pie. wtth : jobs.- It explained . the apparent weeks ago, when it was reported that the com- 
• ■ Cook said, .paradox* tto way: Sirme the. d^jxrtmenf be- pany had been offered for sale, its. treasurer 

FUN FOR KIDS- 8 311 compiling employment statistics, .the said; “We just don’t do enough business to 

SH AtR FUND / IaiBsst proportion ctf , the population was re- support' the overhead we have now " [l-^5.3 


naka scandal. - I^ge3 
Kenya and Uganda in pact to 
end hostility. Page 4 

‘ Ethiopia is cautioned on anti- 
U.S. position. Page 4 

Italian Senate votes confi- 
dence in. Cabinet Page 5 
Docility reigns in an Indian 
^tate. Page 5 

British M.P. is given 7-year 
sentence. ; page 8 

Government and Politics 
Ford increases scrutiny on 
running mate. Page 6 
Schweiker says Reagan has * 
new delegates. Page 6 
Seats hails Reagan gam in 
Jersey. Page 6 

Mrs. Abzug gets 2 labor 
anion’s backing Page 7 
City gets community develop- 
ment grant. . . page 44 

: Genera 1 

Abercrombie & Fitch plans a 
bankruptcy step. Pagel 
Bar chief ^suggests abolishing 
some jury trials. Page? 
Bias charged in dosing child 
lunch sifc>s, *■ Page 20 
Missing witness turns up in 
Rubin . Carter case. Page 20 
Lawyers puzzled by gag in 
murder trial. ' - Page 20 
Court orders refund of in- 
valid rent rise. Page 20 
Federal agency bars egg in- 
dustry ads. Page 22 
Metropolitan Briefs. Page 23 
’Foreign subways surpass 
New York's. Page 23 

New York, seeks to attach 
Hollander fortune. Page 23 
New York will not get Jersey 
tax benefit Page 23 

Health and Science 
Adherence of Mars soil to 
lander confirmed. Page 9 

Amusements and the Arts . 
Irene Raico sings Aris 
Sans. Page 11’ 

Nadia Potts make debut as 
Giselle. Page 11 


. Jets to give Buttle a start 

Pa£e 11 against Giants. Page 13 
Nikolais dancers continue on Baddy Allin, at 130 keens 
way. Page 11* B .C. golf teal %4?ll 

* ^eweT m play K^tes 

reviewed. Page 17 twice tonight Page 14 

Going- Out Guide Page 11 Britton leads .advance in met- 

About New York Page 10 ropolitan golf. Page 15 

XPorvwf*. f Shetland is jm^ed best in 

f aX ^I3 t7le A >, ut, upstate show. Page 17 

Apartments and health care . n , 

fqr aged. Page 24 Notes on People Page 12 

Paris exhibition shows fa- Man in the News 
shion history. Page 24 Leonard Bachman, Permsyl- 
Obitoaries - health chief. Page 9 

M. G. Baker, founder of Val- -Editorials and Comment 
ley Forge Academy, Page 22 Editorials and Letters. Page 18 
Peter G. L, Hodgson Sr., de- C.L Sulzbexgen a talk with 
v el oped saiy Putty. Page 22 . . Santiago Carrillo; Page 19 
Mazy Josephine Shelly, edu- Denis Hayes; energy growth 
cator, aged 74. ■ Page22 ■ is no job creator. Page 19 

Business and Financial “ 

d2bi retSment 
for New Yort: City. Page 19 

In^ banks, Page25 News Analysis 
Treasury sells $1 billion bond Agis ^lpukas discusses auto 
issue. Page 25 . industry changes. Page 25 

Fund misuse laid to rail of- .Stevmi R. Weisman on hospl- 
ficials. Page25 tal medicaid cuts. Page44 

More companies report pay- 
ments.. Page 25 V~ 

EJLC. multinationals are seen CORRECTIONS 

lagging. • Page 25 L,^ 

Leyland sputters a Wt more . 

smoothly now.. Page 25 An article in Tfae Times 

S-E-C.^ may modify brokers’ yesterday said Agudath Israel 
connrmatioii rules. Page 25 sponsored a number of day- 
. Paw Page care centers. A spokesman 

Bufinea wartfi plan 26 was actlve m centers for the 

Business Recsnfs..27 Hooey .....29 elderly and in education, but 

Oxomixlitlef ,....29 Mutual Foods... 1,31 not in dav cam. 

Coip. AHalrj. ... .27 ILY. Stocks 26 * 

DMdends 2b OutHjf-Toon 29 « 

Exdraagt. .3 ! Ow Hi tattr.Jl . ^ ^ ^ ^ 

Spoils yesterday about the outlook 

Riddick, Foster, Roberts atone for the paper industry, Thom- 
at track meet Page 13 as P. Clephane was Incorrect- 
Soothing rain washes out ly identified. He is a paper- 
Yankm-Oriolea. Page 13 industry analyst and vice 
Connors extended by Dibbs in president at Oppenheimer & 
7-6, 7-6 victory. Page 13 Company. 


CORRECTIONS 


An article in Tfae Times 
yesterday said Agudath Israel 
sponsored a number of day- 
care centers. A spokesman 
for the organization said it* 


• In an article in :The Times 
yesterday about the outlook 
for the paper industry, Thom- 
as P. Clephane was incorrect- 
ly identified. He is a paper- 
industry analyst and vice 
president at Oppenheimer & 
Company. 


s July 10— 4 PJM. 52nd St. & 
it 7th Ave.” 

Apparently no one has ever 
)- been arrested for stenciling. 
»- Although many such ads 
e sprinkle the Times Square 
area and may been seen from 
Herald Square ■ to Columbus 
Circle and along Fifth, Madi- 
son, Park and Lexington- 
f Avenues, the perpetrators are 
s all but invisible to law en- 
: forcement authorities. 

"The trouble is, they’re done 
i after midnight and long be- 
. fore & AM., and we’ve never 
been able to catch anyone at 
it," explained a weary desk 
sergeant at the Midtown 
South Precinct station- on 
West 35th Street. 

“ The precinct patrols the 
area from 29th Street to 45th 
Street between Lexington and 
Ninth Avenues. The Midtown 
North Precinct station, on 
West 54th Street- 5 — it covers 
from 45th Street to 59th 
Street — offered a similar ex- 
planation. 

Quoting The Book 
At City Hall, tbe reaction 
was more formal. A violation 
of Section 692 F-1J), Admin- 
istrative Code of the City of 
New York, said a spokesman 
for Mayor Beame. 

At the Department of High- 
ways, a further explanation. 
“It’s the same problem with 
posters,” said a spokesman 
for Commissioner Anthony R. 
Ameruso. ‘You have to catch 
the person in the act of do- 
ing it and then hand him a 
summons. Tt is very difficult 
.to --enforce. 

"But we’ve bad no com- • 
plaints. Aqyhow, it’s a mat- 
ter of priorities. -We are re- 
sponsible for 51 bridges, 1,200 
structures and 6,000. mites of 
streets, and we’ve been re- 
duced in the last two years 
from a staff of 3,025 to 2^00 
people.” 

At 50th Street ■ and Sev- 
enth Avenue, a worn “Meet 
■Jimmy Carter” reposed along- 
side “All Live, Tfae Gorilla 
and the Girt, Fantasy ..." A 
liberal repetition of these 
and others embroidered the 
- crosswalks of Times Square 
from 42d Street to 52d. 

What seemed to be the 
freshest stencil advertised 
“Monica Kennedy, Live on 
Stage, Show-World, 8th Ave- 
nue-42d and 43d St.” It spar- 
kled near a fading yellow 
stencil reading “Convention 
Week, Ms. AH-Bare America 
—live, Show-World.” 

Among tbe other ads en- 
countered on a stroll around 
midtown was one reading, 
“Godzilla for President" 

Godzilla, a monster tower- 
ing over a city, appeared in 
a continuing series of Japan- 
ese-made monster movies 
originating In tbe 1950’s. 

As people waited at 42d 
Street and Broadway for a 
green traffic light, a man 
was asked if he knew that 
the stenciled "GodriDa” ad 
was illegal 

“Is that so?” he said in 
surprise; 




■.v .. 









tTi 


2 2 


THE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY AUGUST 7, 1976 


F.T.C. 

OF EGG INDUSTRY 


Says They Mislead' On Issue 
of Link to Heart Attack 


WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 (UFI) 
— The Federal Trade Commis- 
sion ruled today that the egg 
indu stry had engaged in "pat- 
ently false and misleading*’ ad- 
vertising by telling American 
consumers there was no evi- 
dence to link the eating of eggs, 
which are high, in cholesterol, 
to heart attacks. 

The agency ordered the in- 
dustry not to make such 
claims. •' 

Eggs are a “complete food 
with many nutritive virtues, 
the commission said, but it 
added that consumers who 
wanted to make well-informed 
dietary selections should be 
aware of information regarding 
cholesterol and heart disease. 

In issuing a cease-and-desist 
order against such advertising 
by the National Commission on 
Egg Nutrition, the commission 
said that it was not making a 
decision on whose “interpreta- 
tion of a difficult and incom- 
plete body of scientific litera- 
ture is superior,” but it said: 

"No consumer who wishes to 
make well - informed dietary 
selections should ignore the ex- 
isting literature (or a 
physician’s evaluation of it) 
with respect to the relationship 
between dietary cholesterol and 
heart disease. A reasonable per- 
son might well decide that the 
ament state of learning and 
opinion with respect to dietary 
cholesterol does not warrant 
limitation of egg consumption 
to any degree. 

“On the other hand, a 
reasonable person might equal- 
ly well conclude that the exist- 
ing evidence is sufficiently 
troublesome to render some 
limitation or reduction of die- 
tary cholesterol (including 
eggs) a prudent measure, as 
many experts now recommend.” 
“In either event, the decision 
is one which a consumer should 
make after a review of all 
available information. By repre- 
senting that 'there is no evi- 
dence that eating eggs will in- 
crease the risk or heart disease' 
[the egg industry] discourages 
that review and represents that 
there is no need for the con- 
sumer to go beyond their ad- 
vertisement, because in this 
case there is simply *no evi- 
dence' to warrant further in- 
quiry." 

The ads in question appeared 
in newspapers around the coun- 
try from 1973 through. part of 
1975 after the sale of eggs 
dropped because of reports of 
the link between cholesterol 
and heart disease. The commis- 
sion said that, by stressing 
there was "no evidence" of a 
link between' cholesterol and 
heart disease, the industry 
presented a message that was 
“patently false and mislead- 
ing." 

The commission ordered the 
egg industry, in any future ad- 
vertising. to make a clear dis 
closure that many medical ex- 
perts believe existing evidence 
indicated there was a link be- 
tween the two. 

The indutfry had argued that 
the commission ignored scien- 
tific studies giving less cre- 
dence to theories about eggs 
and heart disease 


Mary Josephine Shelly, 74; 
Educator and a Navy Aide 


By WOLFGANG SAXON 

Mary Josephine Shelly, a Miss Shelly as administrative 
former Bennington College ad- director, 
ministrator who took charge of A dance workshop was added 
the Navy's education for worn- in 1935, with a leading modern- 
en in Worid War U and com- dancer visiting each summer 
manded the Women in the Air to lead it and to create a pro- 
Force in the Korean War, died fessional production. Out of 
|yesterday at New York Hpspi- that. evolved an annual dance 
taL She was 74 years old and festival at the end of each sum-, 
resided at 10 Mitchell Place, mer session. 

At. Bennington, a progressive Miss Shelly, known as Mary 
college- for women. Miss Shelly joined the regular staff as 
helped to organize dance pro- educational assistant to the 
grams and the Bennington president of Bennington in 
American Dance Festival as 1938, a position she held until 
well as the Bennington School 1954. In 1940, when the school 
of the Arts. She left the col- of the dance was reorganized 
lege in Vermont in 1954 to be- to include music and drama, 
come director of public rela- she became administrative di- 
tions for the Giri Scouts of the rector of the newly established 
U.SA. in New York, a post school of the arts, 
from which she retired about Miss SheUy topk a leave of 
IQ years ago. absence in September, 1942, to 

A native of Grand Rapids, serve as a lieutenant in the 
Mich., Miss SheUy taught in Women’s Naval Reserve in 
the public schools of Battle charge of physical training and 
Creek before becoming an in- drill. She was among, the first 
structor at the University of dozen lieutenants commissioned 
Oregon, where she earned her in the WAVES, Women Ac- 
BA. degree. cepted for Volunteer Emergency. 

In 1929, she received her Service. . 

Masters’s degree at Teachers Within a month, she became, 1 . 
College, Columbia University. Assistant for the Women's Re 
She taught there and at Colton- save to tire Director of Traia- 
bia’s New College until- her ing of the Navy, a position she 
appointment, in 1935, as asso- held until 1945, when she re- 
date professor of physical vetted to the inactive Reserve 
education and assistant to the as a commander. In tire mean- 
dean of students at the Uni- time, she directed education 
versity of Chicago. programs and the expansion of 

To Bennington Faculty WAVES schools from one to 32. 

o nsnuingwii raeuny 194 5 i ^ pianned and over- 

She also served as chairman saw the demobilization of the 
of the women’s physical educa- WAVES from their wartime 
tion department, and it was strength of 85,000. Her services 
in this period that she devel- earned her a Secretarial Csta- 
oped her interest in relating tion from James V. Forrestai. 
the dance to the modern the Secretary of tire Navy, 
physical education program. Miss SheUy took another 
Miss Shelly's association with leave from Bennington in 1951 
Bennington dated, from 1933, to become an Air Force colonel 
the year after the college and direct Women in the Air 
opened its doors, when she was Force, at a time when the serv- 
invited to help Marthy Hill ices sought to Increase their 
Davies, teacher of the dance, recruitment of women for the 
develop a summer school of Korean emergency. She returned 
modern dance. The Bennington to Bennington late in 1953. 
School of the Dance was open- 


ed the foUowing summer with 



Peter C.L. Hodgson, Marketer 
Of Silly Putty, Dies at Age 64 




Bftdija 


Mary Josephine . Shelly 
some time ago. 


ALVANC.HADLEYtfl, 
THEATRICAL ARTIST 


By ROBERT D. McFADDEN 
Peter C. L. Hodgson Sr., an 
advertising and marketing exec- 
utive who turned a seemingly • 
useless silicone substance into 
an international ' craze called 
Silly Putty, died of a heart at- 
tack yesterday at his home in 
[Madison, Conn. He was 64 years 
old. 

It was in 1949 that Mr. Hodg- 
son, who had founded his own 
ad agency in New Haven after 
World War H, discovered the 
blob of goop that millions of 
children and adults would come 
to consider the ultimate play-, 
thing. 

It molded like soft clay. It 


stretched like taffy/ It bounced 
like a rubber balL And' it would 
eveh pick up pictures and 



Peter c. L. Hodgson Sr. 


Alvaix C. -Hadley, who used 
the name Hap in his career as 
a newspaper cartoonist and the* 
atricai artist, died in New York 
City on Tuesday. He was 81 
years qkL 

Mr. Hadley was bom in Fin- 
lay, Ohio, and began his career 
while serving with the Marines 
in World War I by creating two 
comic strips about Marine 
heroes, “Marty the Marine’’ and 
“Devil Dog Dave," which, ap- 
peared in The New York World 
and The World Telegram. 

He later toured 'with a chalk- 
talk act and served as a roving 
artist with D. W. Griffith dur- 
ing the production of the movie 
'America.” 

After two one-year stints Il- 
lustrating vaudeville reviews 
for the New York Sunday Amer- 
ican and The New York Sunday 
Mirror, in 1924 and 1925, he 
opened his own advertising ami 
graphics studio, which he op- 
erated for 30 years, specializing 
in movie and theater advertis- 
ing. 


He is survived by his wife, 
Margaret; two children, Diane 
Miss Shelly left no anmediateland Col. Alvan C. Hadley Jr*, 


survivors. 


and two grandchildren. 


Gregor Piatigorsky, Celiist, Dead at 73 


Continued From Page I, Col 2 


LITTON AND FAMILY 
BURIED IN MISSOURI 


CHILLICOTHE, Mo., Aug. 
(AP) — Representative Jerry Lit- 
ton, killed in a plane crash the 
night he won the Democratic 
senatorial nomination, was bur- 
ied today after services attend- 
ed by Congressional leaders, 
state officials and hundreds of 
friends. 

Mr. Litton, 39 years old, his 
wife, Sharon, 38; their two chil- 
dren, Linda, 13, and Scott, 12, 
and two other persons were 
killed in a. plane crash Tues- 
day. 

Light rain and overcast skies 
set the mood as services were, 
■conducted. Most businesses in 
Chillicothe, a town of 10,000, 
were closed. 

More than 1,500 persons, in- 
cluding 65 members of Con- 
gress and other officials from 
Washington, jammed the sane - 
tuaiy and fellowship hall of 
the United Methodist Church. 
Four coffins were in the front 
of the sanctuary. 

A large spray between the 
coffins of Mr. apd Mrs. Litton 
read, “With deepest sympathy. 
President and Mrs. Jerry Ford.” 
A flag that had Flown over the 
Capitol was draped over Mr. 
Litton’s coffin. 

His parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
Charles Litton were helped into 
an adjoining sanctuary. They 
were followed by Mr. and Mrs. 
Clifford Summerville, Mrs. Lit- 
ton’s parents. Outside the 
church, hundreds of townspeo- 
ple gathered. 


Ahmed Fuad Sheriff Dies; 

Cairo Cabinet Affairs Aide 


• CAIRO, Aug. 6 (UPI) — Dr. 
Ahmed Fuad Sheriff, Egypt’s 
Minister of State for Cabinet 
Affairs and a former adviser at 
the United Nations, died today 
of a heart attack. 

Government sources said Dr. 
Sheriff, who was 50 years old, 
was stricken Wedneday as ho 
was working on two urgent re- 
ports he wanted to submit to 
President Anwar el-Sadat. 

One of the reports dealt 
with a plan to set up an Arab 
fund to bolster Egypt’s ailing 
economy. 

He was rushed to the Mili- 
tary Hospital at Maadi, one of 
Egypt's 'best, and placed in an 

intensive-care unit 


silk in pianissimo measures, or 
passages of rapid ornamenta- 
tion.” 

Even in his later years, when 
age had begun to make inroads 
on his technique, Piatigorsky 
could cast his inimitable spell. 
When the cellist appeared at 
Alice Tully Hall in 1973 on the 
occasion of his 70th birthday, 
Harold C. Schonberg com- 
mented: 

"Mr. Piatigorsky has always 
been an exponent of the sweep- 
ing, Russian, Romantic style of 
playing. He remains so, and his 
heart is still young even if 
his bow arm occasionally may 
falter. No matter what he 
plays, the music tends to sound 
the same — with a big line, the 
big ritard, the sentimental 
phrasings, the various expres- 
sive devices beloved of a pre- 
vious generation." 

For most concertgoers, Piati- 
gorsky was to the cello what 
Jascha Heifetz was to the 
violin and Vladimir Horowitz 
to the piano — a transcendent 
virtuoso whose very name be- 
came synonymous with his in- 
strumerf Like his two col- 
leagues, Piatigorsky was Rus- 
sian-born (in Yekaterinoslav on 
April 17, 1903). He later made 
his home in the United States, 
becoming a citizen in 1942. 

Piatigorsky was a prodigy, 
and in his autiobiography, 
Cellist,” which was published 
in 1965 and covered the first 
35 years of his life, he recount- 
ed a mind-boggling array of 
youthful adventures. 

Before he was 14 years old 
be survived a pogrom practiced 
the cello in the early morning 
hours “with a soundless sys- 
tem l deviseO — my fingers 
on the fingerboard and the bow 
in the air” and was seduced 
by a young woman named 
Vera, who was employed fn a 
euphemistically entitled “night- 
club*’ (“When I said at home 
had spent the night with 
Vera, I was surprised at the 
effect it made.") 

Still in his early teens, he 
played jo a silent movie house, 
appeared with Chaliapin and 
finally became principal cellist 
of the Bolshoi orchestra, where 
be received a child’s wartime 
food ration card and was called 
the chocolate baby.” 

A Meeting With Lenin 
The Russian Revolution inter- 
rupted his budding career. A 
turbulent period followed in 
ten young musician's life, 
which included a potentially 
threatening meeting with Lenin. 
The Soviet leader asked the 
cellist whether he bad in fact 
protested the name Lenin 
String Quartet for a new group, 
and had suggested instead that 
it be named after Beethoven. 

Piatigorsky admitted that he 
had, and Lenin replied: 

' 'I am not an expert on music, 
but I know that there is no 
more befitting - name for a 
quartet than. Beethoven. The 
Lenin String Quartet will not 
last; Beethoven will.*’ 

Piatigorsky left Russia in 
1921, making a hairbreadth es- 
cape from tiie Soviet authori- 
ties when he swam a river to 
the Polish bonier, his cello held 
high above the rapids.- (The 
incident may partly explain thei 
famous Piatigorsky entrance 1 
on the concert stage as he 
made his way through the or- 
chestra, cello invariably aloft 
like a precious prize of battle.) 

Once in Poland and after a 
period of refugee, deprivation, 
Piatigorsky. found employment 
in the Warsaw- Open orches- 
tra. A year later he was off to 


better his fortunes in Berlin, 
where he played in cafes and 
theaters to support himself. 

He caught the attention of 
the great conductor of the Ber- 
lin Philharmonic, Wilhelm Furt- 
w&ngler, who engaged him as 
first cellist and soloist In 1929 
Piatigorsky resigned from the 
orchestra to concentrate on 
solo appearances, although, as 
a sign of gratitude to the con- 
ductor who discovered him, he 
returned to his first desk at 
the Philharmonic whenever 
FurtwSngler conducted. 

Americah Debut In 1929 

It was in the fall of 1929 
that Piatigorsky made his 
American debut, on Nov. 5, in 
Oberlin, Ohio. The next month 
he gave his first New York 

performance, playing the 
Dvorak Cello Concerto with the 
Philharmonic under Willem 
Mengelberg. The debut was a 
triumphant success — “He is 
one of the most poetic and sen- 
sitive performers before the 
public,” proclaimed Samuel 
Chotzinoff in The New York 
World — and the Piatigorsky in- 
ternational career was well on 
its way. 

For the next 20 years, Pi- 
atigorsky lived the hectic life 
of a touring virtuoso, taking his 
$30,000 Stradivari us cello into 
cities and towns across the 
United States and Europe, ap- 
pearing with nearly every 
major conductor and symphony 
orchestra in the world. 

At the age of 46, in 1949, 
he decided to slow the pace, 
and his solo appearances 
gradually became more and 
more infrequent as he spent 
much of his time in his Los 
Angeles home and teaching 
master classes at the University 
of Southern California. 


podium manner and poor beat 
as he was for his brilliantly 
revelatory interpellations. Once 
he told Piatigorsky how im- 
portant it was for a conduc- 
tor to convey his wishes dear- 
ly. only to stand up later in 
rehearsal and say “Gentlemen, 
this phrase must be— it must — 
it must — you know what I 
mean — please try it again — 
please." 

Toscanini once reduced Pi- 
atigorsky to a shattered bundle 
of nerves before a concert by 
shaking his head sadly and re- 
peating over and over, “You 
are no good, I am no good 
The self - critical conductor, 
finally shrugged and led his 
trembling soloist on stage with 
an encouraging, "We are no 
good, but others are worse. 
Come on, caro, let’s go.” 
Although he always con- 
fessed severe bouts of stage 
fright as a matter of course, 
Piatigorsky invariably cut a 
figure of total assurance on the 
concert platfonn. 

"Forget about modesty,” he 
once advised a pupil, summing 
up fas performing philosophy. 
“Be a show-off. There has 
never been written a modest 
symphony, a humble rhapsody. 
You must-be able to say with 
great feeling. 1 hate you,’ or 
T love you.* Once you are able 
to say that, you will find you 
can play the cello.” 

The cellist is survived by his 
wife, the former. Jacqueline de 
Rothschild; daughter of Baron 
Edouard de Rothschild of Paris, 
and by a daughter, Jephta, who 
is Mrs. Darnel Drachman of 
Baltimore, and a son. Dr. Jorum 
Piatigorsky of Bethesda, Md. 

The funeral service will -be 
private. There will be a public 


printed matter when pressed on 
a newpaper or comic strip, 

The stuff had been developed 
by General Electric ' scientists 
in the company’s New Haven 
laboratories several years' ear-] 
lier in a search ■ for a viabtei 
synthetic rubber. It was obvi- 
ously not satisfactory, and it 
found its way instead onto the 
local cocktail party circuit 
An Idea Was Born 
That’s Where Mr. Hodgson, 
who was at the time writing a 
catalogue of toys for a local 
store, saw it, ami an idea was 
bom. 

“Everybody kept saying 

there was no earthly use for 
the stuff.” he later recalled. 
•But I watched them' as they 
fooled with it I couldn't help 
noticing how people with busy 
schedules wasted as much as 15 
minutes at a shot just fondling 
and stretching it 

T decided to take a chance 
and sell some. We put an ad 
in the catalogue on the adult 
page, along with such goodies 
as a spaghetti-making machine. 
We packaged- the goop in a 
clear compact case and tagged 
it at SI.” 

Having borrowed SI 47 for 
the venture, Mr.' Hodgson 
ordered a batch from General 
Electric, hired a Yale student 


to separate the gob into one- 
ounce dabs and began filling i Weaver, a son, Peter Jr n of Los 


vantage of it. -In 1950, he 
established Arnold Clark Inc.', 
in New Haven and a manufact-. 
uring plant in North Branford, 
Cornu to make and distribute 
the nort toxic goo. 

As sales expanded, Mr. Hodg- 
son, -the president of Marketing 
Inc. in New Haven, established 
distribution and sales compa- 
nies in Canada and Europe. 
Half-ounce dabs of Silly Putty 
in plastic egg-shaped" contain- 
ers are sola Tor $J each 
throughout the United States! 
and 22 other countries, and an- 
nual sales exceed S5 million 
Mr. Hodgson, ' a tall, robust 
man with a dose-cropped, full, 
gray explorer's beard,; marketed 
a wide range of products and 
ideas — tires to- toys and beer 
to political candidacies — in his 
long career in advertising. In 
the late 1930's, be headed an 
organization that established 
Wendell Wilflae dubs across 
the country, anticipating Mr. 
Willlde's 1940 Republican 
Presidential candidacy 
Peter Calvert Leary Hodg- 
son Sr. was boro in Montreal 
on Aug. 15, 1912, the son of 
an American civil engineer. He 
grew up in Norfolk, Conn., 
and Miami, joined the Navy 
in 1929 and, after being dis- 
charged, joined a New York ad- 
vertising agency in 1933. 

He is survived by his second 
wife, the former Margaret 


ARIES— Efflllte, -aw 6B»« AMUSt-A TJ76 
loW. Start 'NwrtjW. frntwwi ,«* Ere 
Krtflft Aries.? £3 Wlpdra tinW^Horwatt, 
Conn. SOS ohSxM*, Aries. rfAM 
dt*. father of. Robert sad. Richard Arte. 
Brother rf Robert S. Aries. Mb Rm 
F uneral wrvias Smtet, Us3ft A^L.-Tlmt- 1 
ale SWem, RWiai* Avenua. ttnr wlfc. 
InWJHflof Jofawwderi Jfetewr Sodefr 
Gemrter*, HorwaDc. in Ilea of fbw« 
contributions mn br made to Dr; John 
Pool Discreflonwv Fund lor -Cancer Fa- 
tints. Gnw of-Honralk Hwrttil, Ww 
Street, fiorwafc Cbm. OASSk ear Wopha- 
Hoo call 20HUMW. 


ARIES— Emile. Wfflj a dee? saw of sorrow 
ws rcconttbc htss-of ow tor.fnem an 
asKfefe. Ernie Aries. . HJs mmileA 
human aril mas, Ms tawwtatae and artsdom 
■111 ha 5W«r ntead. Oor-. sham cop: 
dooms t» hfc twifr- , . _ 

Thg Omcsrs and MmfjerS of 
Scmtraat Wine CQu Inc. 


B&OYE-PNflP M. MM 7 ?. .Iwtai 
mnUfr of Mount hu s ban d, father and 
srawjfattwr. 

BLOCS — Georgia. blared ' hrSmd of Adr. 
Dented mat Of. pater and Sergo, ; Str* 
las. Sunder, Amort «B, W0 KM. “The 
rowrsMe," 76 S_ and Arostentotn Aw. 


rime)" Brotbw of Joses* H. Borden, Martin 
Burden and. pri ftakkar. Unde of 


Patty Boehudc, 'RuMy .RnwKar, Mhrr 
Venn* eta, Waste*. Rtoanf and Robin, 
Santa,' Bid Herbert Morse. -Friends ruv 
call rt- Frat E. Cuooben, Madison Aw. 
ri 81 Street. Friday 3. to and 

Saturday until t PJVL interment private. 


SOYER— BefcrfH. Rm C, AUL. Of Autrort 
5, NM. SUar of Mrs. Davetta Watdroan. 
Grawdda arvtco was held Friday 
P«Mi 


BRILL— SJa. Briowd irtfa of Hw Ms Henry. 
Dsrty dental matter of Hubert. Lovta 
aunt, sJstor-iMwt 'and aassfav 'Services 
Sunday Aoeurt 8th, J PJUL ‘The Rlwr- 
sU*.*' 76 Si. and- Amsterdam . Aw. 


orders. At the same time, he ! Angeles; two daughters, Marga- 
hurried to get some trade- ; ret Maxguiies of Santa Cruz, 


marks. 

Silly Putty was an instant 
success, ' and Mr. Hodgson 
quickly geared up to take ad- 


Calif., and Nancy Mams of 
Berkeley, Calif., 10 grandchil- 
dren and a sister, Jane Dennis 
of Belmont, Mass. 


EDWIN H. DOWNES, 78, 
DELAWARETEACHER 


Edwin Hall Downes, an edu- 


Dr. Wills H. E/ton, 33, 

Of Lehman Faculty, Dies 


Dr. Willa H. Elton, assistant 

_ , . . .professor of Spanish literature 

cater in Miwmwta also JbJ, Lehmail CaI [ ^ yeste ._ 

a commander of the United Moum siaai H itaI 

States N™ 1 !«•““ foilowtag a long Alness. She 

m Hampton^, in Worid Warj^ ^ ^ ^ 

n. where training was Pmv><Wi Jactaoa J HeWlK , Queetls . 

A graduate -of Barnard Col 


BRrrrOK— Tteodore JR. m. Tfco Boa id 0 f 
- Director! of .Um new Ydrir CRy MMoo 
Society artif flw Board of Managers rt 
Its Society's MJnlsWc Broach m rag tteV 
heartfelt symnttnr to the wonts, wife 
end family of Theodora ft. Britto n II . 
wUasa promising career ended la a trade 
accident last Saturday. ; Ho- will liva In 
the laving memory ot many triads. 


BUFFJWCTOT— ftoyd JunattL at Ms .h 
308 Lift to Britain R&T^Tow n f t Hew- 
harsh, N.Y. 0B Thursday. August 5. He 
Is ttw husband of .Cttfterlna' Truman. 
Private service, and cremation « ttel 
uwv e nla ocg of the tenril;;. Jn Dn ofl 
thaws klMflr rand amtrttoftani «■ St.| 
Luka’s Hospital, tfawburah, N.Y. or charity 
of your choice. 


BYRNE— John F. The Society of the Friendly) 
Sons of Saint Patrick in' the City cf 
New York records with p ro f o un d sorrow 
the death of John F. ftvrtw. a Member of 
ttw society. 

JOSEPH C HUGEST, Prastdont 
MARK P. STUMP F, Historian 


CDH EH— Joseph, MamaroMdl, N. Y. On 
Assist £» bostMod of Side) fneo Sodow). 
Filter ot Susan Andrews at Hew Rorbelte, 
PL Y. Grantfattor of tbrm. No servtcss. 
GnrinbatfcBs -may be made to ttw Heart 
of Cancer Funds. 


EASCE-aara Ab, on August 5, 1974, - of 
Garden' aty. Beloved wlta of the lato 


devote? mother of Owrtes W 
and w. Nelson Earle. Also serened by 7 
grandchildren- Sister of Gaorse A. MtXJioll- 
F fiends mar call at ttw Falrcfiiw OmdcI. 
FranfcUn An at 12 SU Garden City, 2-5 
and 7-9 P.Nt Service Sunday 3 PJH. at 
ttw chapel, interment Union Cemetery, 
Wbmnodoet ft. I. to Heu of flowers con- 


tributions to American Heart A Lou Asso-| 
daBan as 


appreciated. 

EBERSOM— frwto H. Sanford Halt Coro' notes, 
with nretomtf sorrow ttw Wtftnwl r passim 
of .Its very valued associate and dear 
friend. Oor dooms! nrouattdas are ex- 


tended to his wfto Shirley, daughters Susan 
and Sterwv Us dear mnitmr and entire, 


family. 

ELTON — Dr. Wills M. BeJtnred -wife' of Alan. 
Derided mother of DoriadT Catherine and 
Joseph. Lnta drashtar of George and 
Sant sac fc Dear sister of Roger amt Martha 
Jem Sack. Services Sunday August 811), 
12:3a PJW. at “The Riverside," 76 St. and 
Amsterdam Are. In lieu of flowers con- 
tributions may ba mam to too Chamo- 
ttnnpr Foundation, 2 East BA SJ„ ft.Y.C. 
10828. 

ELTON— Willa. We mrorn the untimely pass- 
im of our cherished twice and beloved 


Arias, Emile • • 
Below, Ptiltto M. 
Binds, Gedrut 
Benton, Ratten 


leuiBW 

Umeta 

Loaner, 

MdHtos 



Boyer, Bobrin, Ruse C -Naifey, 


Brill, Hfa . . . 

Britton, Uwodore R. 
Buffington, Floyd J. 

Byrne,. Jotm F. . 

Cohen, Joseph 
Earle, Clara M. 

Eberson* Irwin H.' 

Elton. WHla Hi 
GeHttOb Nathan 
Gateau, Dora 
Hamfftonr MW V. 

Jteteoo, Beatrice 
Jameson, Jean D. 
JgretBoatrioiB. 

Jayne, Karri 
Kennae tty, Vlnamt 6. Koffr 
Krttortn, Kriinr A. yun 


pateno 

Ponrere 

Pu&f 

Renat, 

Ruben 

ScbUw 

SduieT 

Sdfcnt 

Stuptr 

Strvhi, 

J)*, 

Usual 

VooG 

Von k ■ 

'Ham 


■Jit 




- ■ tV*** "i 




MdNTOSH— Edlttt F-, On Ai 
OceanSMu, U.' Dear wo 
and DsMkl Bane Mclntuh 
James JHJ« and Mare- t 
Swretvud by - many -Maid 
Serein at toe Dayton X 
Homo, 2o Lbtcola .Awt, 
LL Monday 11 AJM. trie 
Cem&rr, Hsmprioai Li 
3-4 and 7-9 PJUL Sahntbi 


■ ■- >3 

. Mtr*: i* 


KB LEY— Emily 6-.,0f ton 
On -Aosort A, f^TS- Wfa 
ward A. Mtlw. “utter 
ffefltor, -Jr.- and Kattarin 
Sister ot Alfred Gardner 
chUdron. A memorial us 
on Monday, August V, P 
In toe First ~ ' ' 




of flowers, memorial cote 
made te-tte tomkan c 


PALERMO— <armolo. ttoa 

Funeral Home .on -Bragi 
Brum mrtlt Atamby, f; 
POMERAKTZ— Paulloe. ^ 
row on. too peistiig 4t? 
lata Gotwoor, Samftj 




r - ^ 3-JS2 


BROOKCY*-j 
BENJAMIN 


POSH-PWIto K, of 7X1 
Houston. Terms 


- v '. _tftV ■ 

fy-' ‘ vr -ft 


■ 7mL± 


roshtero. of.jm 


<1 .. -a 1 


Yurie City, dhd 

June 29. Suretvbw fa. 

REiBEL— Ruth, roar dear 
s/mpritir. Gel dye, Mlct 


RUBENS— Robert. Wo an 
by toe- lose ot an eater 
lennie. Oor shnxre t 
family. 

IEOHABD, MARGIE, u 


- 

:'y. -i?* 

- - A.. 


5CH LAGER— Walter L~, 
Cerebral .Palsy Asm 
County, IOC. reennh w 
timely pussteu of Yfafl> 
member of our Jbfriio 
torofttat «d mw 
heartfelt caMtafenas jt 
HAROLD 
• ' Owl 
, -dm®! 




■ - ,'twI' 


SCH LASER— Waite 
of D1 reefers, Wc 


L Jr. 



• ' L. 


deeoesf-snarathrta^ 


WU5UM Mu — . 
The Hfl 0 ..lHUJAMjG. _ 
Oieeos .iteWtoBj 


• 4~- 1 

• • ^ 11 1 vfMgBS 


cousin. Oar hearts • will always be hilljSHAPIRO— Hannah W. C 


of her warmth, tow and for. 

HEN NY, IRVING, ALMA and FLORENCE 


for black naval officers, died 
Tuesday in' Dover, Del. He was 
7S years old. ■ 

Mr. Downes graduated in 
1919 from the Naval Academy. 
He was a teacher and principal 
and superintendent of schools 
in SeJbyville and Dover. • 

After World War n he served 
as dean of faculty of the Peru- 
vian Naval Academy. After re- 
tiring as a Navy commander, 
Mr. Downes joined the Interna- 
tional Petroleum Company, an 
affiliate of the Standard Oil 
Company, New Jersey, in 
charge of its training depart- 
ment in Peru. He also handled 
similar jobs in Central America 
and the Caribbean. 

He later operated his own 
consulting group, Downes Asso- 
ciates Inc. Mr. Dpwnes, an ex- 
pert bridge player, was the 
author of . a series of books on 
contract bridge. During the 
Depression, he gave bridge lps- 
sons in Pittsburgh department 
stores. 

He was the first chairman of 
the board . of trustpes of Del- 
aware Technical and Commu- 




at 12:30 P.M. in the Bovard 
Auditorium of the University 


new Robin Hood Dell last June, 
with Eugene Otmandy conduct- 
ing the Philadelphia Ochestra. 

A Vivacious Raconteur 
Piatigorsky’s life was 
crammed with incident and, un- 
like many cellists famous for 
their morose personalities, he 
was a vivacious and inveterate 
raconteur. Most of the best! 
stories, possibly somewhat em- 
bellished for effect, are told in 
his autobiography. 

A keen and often perceptive 
observer of his fellow musi- 
cians, Piatigorsky could usually 
summon up an anecdote . that 
would instantly capture their, 
character. 


LYDIA B. COWELL 
Lydia B. Cowell, .who was 
active in the affairs of- Trinity 
Baptist Church in Brooklyn and 
later with the United Presby- 
terian Church in Garden City, 
L. L died Wednesday in Hamil- 
ton, N. Y., after a long illness. 
Her age was 88. 

Mrs. Cowell was the widow 
of Thaddeus G. Cowell, a law- 


“I have carried my big cello 

from city to city,” he explained £f“ Southern California, 
in 1951, returning to the con- 
cert stage after a 15-month 
sabatical. “I have never refused 
an interview, even to a school 
paper. I have seen everybody 
after a performance who want- 
ed to see me. For a while, I 
can stop.” 

A Piatigorsky performance 
increasingly became a special 
event from the early 1960’s, re- 
served to mark a specific occa- 
sion. It was during these years 
that he began to participate in 
chamber music recitals with his 
California neighbor Jascha Hei- 
fetz and a select group of musi- 
cians. This stellar ensemble 
played two series of conceits 
in New York, in 1964 and 1966 
at Carnegie Hall- 
While he had more or less 
given up solo recitals by then, 

Piatigorsky would still occa- 
sionally perform a work partic- 
ularly associated with him, 

Strauss’s “Don Quixote,” which 
he had played under the 
composer's baton during his 
early years. His last appearance 
in the East was . in this work, 


He is survived by his wife, 
the former Hazel Kline; a son, 
Dr. Edwin Hall Downes Jr., and 
a granddaughter. 


lege, class of 1963, she earned 
her MA. degree from Columbia 
University in 1967. She com- 
pleted her Ph.D. requirements 
in Spanish at the City Univer- 
sity of New York in 1972. 

She is survived by. her hus- 
band, Alan; two daughters, 
Dorian and Catherine, and 
son, Joseph. 

Also surviving are her par- 
ents, Dr. and Mrs. George H. 
Sack; a brother, Roger, and a 
sister, Martha Jane. 


GEIXMAN— Nattwi. Beloved husband of 
Rose. Devoted fattier of Joan ' and. Judith. 
Dear brother of Harold. Oierfebad grand- 
father . Funeral services Sunday to A-M. 
at I. J. Morris, Inc. IKS Ratbush Are. 
(T hlK north ot Kiras Hwr) Brooklyn. 

G ELMAN— Dare. Beloved wife of' the late 
Isaac devoted mother of Ueset Garber, 
and Bernard, dear sister of Rota Bertas, 


loving grandmother. Sendees Sunday, 1 


P-M. at Gutiarman's “Lincoln 
Chapels,'' Broadway af doth St. 


Square 


.. pass- 
aMrotter and 


Maj. H. E. Garrison Killed 
While Training Saudi Pilots 


ANTHONY L.MELUCCI 
Dr. Anthony L. Melucci, a 
chiropractor, of 2214 82d 

Street, Brooklyn, died Thurs- 
day in Veteran’s Hospital, Fort 
Hamilton, Brooklyn, after a 
heart attack. His age' was 80. 
Survivors include his wife, 


the former Adele Ventricelli; a 
yer with the firm of Lord, Day I daughter Mrs. Joseph Calas- 
& Lord. 1 clone, and a grandson. 


WASHINGTON, August 
(Reuters) — Maj. Hany EL Garri- 
son of Bridgeton, N.J., has been 
lolled while serving as an in- 
structor of pilots in Saudi Ara- 
bia, the Air Force said today. 

Major Garrison and a Saudi 
student pilot died on July 21 
in a crash of an American F-5B 
fighter trainer near the Saudi 
Air Force Base at Taif, the 
spokesman said. 

The Air Force could not im- 
mediately say whether the ma- 
jor was the first American mil- 
itary officer killed while in- 
structing a foreign student pilot 
Or how many American-military 
men had died «as instructors or 
advisers there. 


REV. JAMES E. DIXON 

The Rev. James E. Dixon, 
who served for many years at 
SL Paul the Apostle Roman 
Catholic Church at 59th Street 
and Columbus Avenue, died 
Thursday in Lincoln City, Ore., 
where he had lived in' retire- 
ment since 1970. He was €7 
years old. 


HAMILTON— Maty V. He mourn toe 
In* of our Bear ■ friend, cwrwta 
member. 

The JDITH HARRIS SELIG 
Memorial Fund, Inc. 

JACOBSON— Beatrice. Baftnmd daughter -of 
Arthur and Ann*. Devoted sister ot Rboda 
GptttwH and Oorotoy . HowelL Adored aunt 
of DavH Gottortf and Sasan ScbKMwv 
Services Sunday August M,- 11:45 AM. 

■'The RlvursWe." 76 St and Amsterdam 
Aw. . . 

JACOBS Ofl-Beatrics C We mown uHttr 
' Rhode Goitteif on; . esteemed treasurer, 1 

and librarian toe Passing of tier beloved 
sifter Bea. We extend our heartfotf sym- 
w IWes to tog family. Services. Sunday 
■tunning 11:45 Rlvgnldg Chanel, 76 SI. 
and Amsterdam Avu. 


SCHHEHJER— Oscar tTfed 
of Gertrofc. ipewted 
SdroeMtr M&XHit and i 
of Rebecca and Ufa-- 
' Stamfay W:«KML. 

Chapelt” of t. JT-Mn 
' wtefa Hampstead, . 
SEITZ MAN— Albert Isaac 1 
Evetro. ■ adartM- and' 
ftfnna-Guotd, -loving 
draw Gootd. Service*. 
11-J0 AJVL.' "The 
& Amsterdam An. \ 




Moved mother -of Me 
Judah 8 Jessica Grl 
Naomi A Rtahaed .lte 
Sidney, Marlon and / 
of Samuel J. Wetter. '. 
and Ltobv W. Uk** 
nest 8» 10=30 KM 
tral Are. Far ftockn 


SHAPIRO ItewtalC 1 tor 
nay Par£ Its SWeri 
organl rat ions mourn • 
founding cherished r~ 
Jove and devotion n. 
.acttvIHe* far over > 
'woman'- Of' valour, 
m s ts«3 by our awn 
band, Israel, her 
Ethel Shapiro and Je— '• 
eta, grandchildren ar 
ores) smMtoy. ft 
Rivers Ida", Far Rock 
Ri 


Dr. LEONARD 
BE 


^ ■BJJWi Jeshunm Choral So defy 
Cantor ROBERT 5, SEGAL, Director 


MAX N. KLEIN. Presides 
'JAMESON— Jean D., wtoj of A. Gregory 
Jameson, mother of Robert and Susan, 
died August & 1976. Friends. may call at 
738 East 71 Streot, 11 AJ»L to 7 
Monday, August 9. Contributions may be 
sent ip The Visiting Nurse . Service. 

JAftET— Beatrice B. Beloved wife of the 
late Earl Jeret. Loving mother of Mal- 
cwlra. Md bar- In-law ot Janet. Devoted 
grandmother and great grandmother. Serv- 
ices Sunday, 10:00 A.M. at The Riverside, 
Br^Hrart. Mow# veroon. Vkstllng 
fanlafrt 7:304:00 PM, 


JAYNE— Hazel nee -West. Of Brooklyn. On 
toswt 4, 1976 at the age of 84. Widow 
of Robert M. Jayne, Jr. Survived tor 
dawhteo Janto Jayne Cram of Cheverlv, 
Md^ and steters Alary and Ida. Bom In 
SBteuket. Daughter of Samuel and Ida 
West. Reposing Bryant Funeral Home, Inc * 
Saturday, 11:30 AJA., 
Cfltter JMM Cemetery, Pert Jef/eraon. 


KENNEALLY— Vincent G., on Aosiul 8, 1976, 
Jwtored brother of Atdte; beloved son of 
toe tete John and Kathryn; dear brofhar 
rt too late John. Renoslra at. toe David 
X Hwldbr 8 Son Inc Funeral Hume. 099 

tt^ san /’Scfa J. DnhB 5' ** Wmhati Aw. 
Mas* of Christian Buriat St. Baranbas 
Oturdt. Monday 10 A.M. Intannwt Calvary 
tlmetery. Vtofflis hours 2-4 and 7-10 PM 


KR1KOR1AH— Krffcor A. On August S, W7*. 
Sg**™ f l . WALLACE FUNERAL HOME, 
1S43 St. Nlrtjotes .Avwme tat 187Mi Sl.l 
ajnricw Monday, AmusI 9, 1976 at llJfl 
at Wallace Funeral Home. Hiterment Cedar 
Grow I CflHlw. WslHng houra Sunday 

Wl f’T, 


LEVINSON— Olan S. Beloved aonf of Fran- 
dne Levins on Stmayerstm, devoted cousin 
and Mend. Servian Sunu, Aue. 8, 10:45 
Aj4„ a f "The ■ RrrorslOe.-’ 7 Ms St. end 
Amsterdam Are. 


Gen. M. G. Baker Dead; Began Academy 


Military funeral services 
were held yesterday at the 
Valley Forge Military Academy 
and Junior College for Lieut. 
Gen. Milton G. Baker, who 
founded the institution in. 
Wayne, Pa., in 1928 and retired . 
as superintendent in 1971. His 
age was 79. 

General Baker died in his 


t *». ■ e . . . ■ , .home, “Crossed Sabres,” in 

^. d ® I ^ ua s [wayne last Saturday. 


The services were held in the 
Chapel of St Cornelius 1 the 
Centurion bn the campus, -and 
burial was in the Baker Mau- 
soleum in the chapel. 

General Baker, who began 
his mQltaiy career as a private 
in the artillery in World War I, 
was twice during the Adminis- 
tration of former President 1 
Dwight D. Eisenhower offered 
the position of Secretary of the 
Army, but declined because of 
commitments to the institution. 

He was commissioned a sec- 
ond lieutenant in 1918, serving 
at the New York port of em- 
barkation and later with the 
War Department in Washing 



Lieut. Gen. Milton G. 
Baker some years ago. 


FurtwSngler, he said, was as'lton. He resigned from the 
famous for his inarticulate Army in 1921 to tegiii a long 


career with' the -Pennsylvania 
National Guard. 

FoUowing a series of promo- 
tions, he became inspector gen- 
eral ot the Pennsylvania Na- 
tional Guard in 1939, and in 
1940 was selected from a group 
of J50 colonels to . serve as 
deputy chief of staff under 
Lieut Gen, Hugh Drum of the 
First Army, it was said to be 


the first time a National Guard 
officer ' had received such an 
assignment. 

The Pennsylvania National 
Guard- was alerted for active 
duty iir- 1941. In 1942 he was 
in charge of training more than 
10$00 Air Corps cadets for 
commissions, qnd in .1943 was 
: appointed a brigadier general, 
placed in command of the 
Pennsylvania Guard; and was 
named a-mejor general in 1945. 
He was promoted to lieutenant 
general m 1956. ■ 

‘ For three years General Bak- 
er was chairman of the Reserve 
Forces Policy Board of the De- 
partment of Defense,' and was 
a personal adviser to the then 
Secretary of Defense, Charles 
;-tE. Wilson. President Eisenhower 


LOUGHMAN— JosepMm, on Ainust S. 1976. 
BdMrt write- of Rev. Russell £-. Gerald 
F." F ™°i? Ortfy- Jrtw -W~ Donald F„ 
Margaret Brmjn. Patrida O'Brien, Edward 
D. Jr. ami ttw i late i JarauMne CD Fill nu- 
wwto. Laviiia sirtsr of MarawHa Furiong. 
Aho survived br 27 graiKkhttdran end 2 
great nvujddHIdirn. Resuslng « and 7-10 
K 1 ' ri. toe Jeflg j. flax Fluwral Kama 
toe.,- 20»post Rd;, Laretanori. Mass of 
toe teurrartten Monde* 12 Noon at St. 
AuguHrw's Oinrdi. Iriermorf Holy Mauri 
CenMfsry- In Itaa of flavrars donations 

SL JssSii. Hi a*’ ~ rnj ™ b, o- com. or; 

me Caratellta tasters would be enured afed. 


LUQUER— TTwtabfif Payne on Wednesday, 
August 4, 1976 of Cambridge. Mess and 
tWftornasir N.H..sud^hraf Plymouth. 
N.H. Husband of Ellmtwfh (Roamel. Father 
ri . Mr*. Donald a Irion, Mrs. Leusan 
ampbetUuKl Mrs. William Banus; brottwr 
rt Lea SblRien Uwuer. Evetro P. Luguer 
and Mre^Tton as u Purdy Jr. service at 
TWnlfy Ororriz,_ Boston, Mass an Setefday 
August 7fh ri 2 PJW. Interment private, 
to .Heu Of flowers ctHttribrilmU may be 
wri to too Squam Lakes setem Center, 
HoMsnxBs, N-H. 


neck, NJ. Belavgd I 
. Sardcn). Devoted fti 
. Start, and' Morten 
Belle Kfflll- SentlcK 
tsh Comm unity Cti 
Sterling Place, Twr 
August 8 at 1:00 P. 
rlod will be risen 
For torther inform* 
MuricanMCreHzman, 

TIETZ— llBM V. Od 
Boca Raton, Fh. Be 
John, formerly tan 
RJ. 23 in Manliatft 
Aug. 5, 1976 m-Bac 
ri Walter B. Cooki 
W. 75 St., Surtay, . 
August 9, 197& -1 
Grove CetartHT. . . 
USMAN— Boris. Beta" 
Devoted fatoer of I 
Parnees. Levine m 
gramKrite. Srivta 
Chapels,- TWI FttB* 
near ICIngs Hlshw?> 
gf 11:15 A.HL 
VON GARLEM— WMa 
6, 1976. Husband .« 
Gartem, brottwot E : 
Gariem. Frwsw* 
head FimarafeHoiwv 
2 to 5 PM 
termeot Stela Kill C 
VON MICSPtfMfgs 
staff Of jl 

with **» rwref mt 
of our astwrow 
Mlcslcy, ■ inaritaF “ 
and gymsataw, aw 
until te deatt- ^ . 

Pf 

WAGER-fterate.^p 9t - 
Wager. Survived I 
Wager, Ulilin Uwr. 

6 grandcftlldran. Sri 
P.M., at TH Slvereb 
WOLFitAN — Net. Wff 
trow- Devoted fatoe 
father-in-law and Bra. 
of Abu, Bella rod 
wood Funeral Chan 
and A vs. M, BrocAJ 
VAEGEft— Raslro.' W 
Deer sister of Carri 
Tanesor. Sendee Si 
AJM., ri ■Ttel WW 
& Grand Concourse-- 











'-^5 








T'- ‘^3 






:* y-m 
± vr-m; s 


Smnrf 


FRUCHTMAtf — Mee. A 
woodlaum Ceun4ery> 
Border Are. 




CKERWOWSKY— WarteT 1 . 
7. 1969. Qarilrai ter 
-8 kind— loved and. 
sadly missed, so Urn 
PARKER— Etta. -AuuUSI 
Batteries of a .4* 
mother-in-law . anf - 
irigodJcfingl y rou t 
■ JANICE. SAM: ■ 
AND M> 


apppfnted himthe United States 
chairman of the United Nations 
Educational, Scientific and Cul- 
tural organization. 

Survivors include his • wife, 
the former Josephine Louise 
Redenius; a. daughter, Ann Bak- 
er Martin, by his first wife, the 
former May Hagenbiich, who 
died in 1970, and two grand- 
children. 



“The Funeral ChapeiU 


1076 Madison Ave^a-^l^Street) , NX, NX 


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; VARD C. BURES . 
.Vmenities needed to. 
S vay? Amen, says 
i’ 1 ' mclnding the 
•./iiuathority. 

urnera, therefore. - 
-. i up with a sizable 
,r -. of improvements, 
•vom quiet tracks to 
-ng stairways, for 
■** Iorig the Manhat- . : 
■'■ ; line that will run 
■: v . f 63d Street The 
redoled to open' in 
ting in 1983. 

,. -they txy to-put' . 
I' hine into the sub- 
: v planners have to , 


ity of design and passenger 
comforts that .can be expected 
in the hew stations.” 

Mr- Katz was referring to 
new lighting techniques, art 
work, signs and “general 
esthetics” in the Bryant Park 
passageway, the IND’s 42d 
Street-Avenue of the Amer- 
.ieas. mezzanine, the BMPs 
Third Avenue station en- 
trance oh 60th Street and the 
IRrs Lexington Avenue sta- 
tion at' 86th Street, among 
other areas. 

In addition, the new sta- 
tions will have “the mostad- 


This new system has con- — . 

nections with the regular 

Metro, or subway network A $22 Million Tax Benefit 


and will serve two main rail- 
road stations, the Gare de 
Lyon and the Gare du Nord. 

The underground station at 
Chfitelet, a huge, multilayer 
complex with moving side- 
walks, not far ..from the old 


From flew Jersey Is Now 
Being Rescinded 


planners have to acoustical treatment 

Mderfng how other ,an ^ air-cooling systems and 
-around the world ^ P rovide increased ameni- 
ave more money ^ or elderly and handi- 
i new lines and on Mr* Katz said, 

at are sometimes Sao Paulo Une 

In 1974, because of severe 
an 100 miles of financial problems, the city 
‘.are under con- . d t0 reduce its construc- 
n major foreign fj 0n of n ® w subway lines to 
iga amenities in- ,°ne. 12 .2 -mile- route 


complex with moving side- ^ NARVAEZ 

walks, not far from the old trentow a, v i- 

market site Les Mle* and. statfi> which a $2 ^ 

* Dame milh’on windfafi from enactment 

will be the crossroads of the nf Maw Ta , , . 

* „ of New Jerseys personal-m-, 

^o^wS^mplete, it 

-«r rr . . repeflluig commuter taxes on 

will offer service to the heart M ** , v *. *, • . . *• ” * 

of Paris from Men., west- residents who 

era end southern sobnrbs. ^ }et ^ 

Since late May, Charles de 



Taj.^ ' ;',»■{' . ■ ■ 

mi it I l T ■* 


Gaulle Airport has been con- 
nected to the Gar? du Nord 
by a new rail spur; intema- 


. A bill deleting the repeal of 
the commuter taxes on resi- 
. dents of New York and Penn* 


an 100 miles nf 
-.. . . are under con- 
\n major foreign 
. ' ign amenities m- 
hxsticated ■ auto- 
./rting for a variety 
■ weD as all sorts 
l facilities on af- 
.□courses. 

1 Attractions 

■i be expected on 
Manhattan -Queens 
; ty new line under 
-i in the dty? A 

- up, to be sure, 
ting away from 
le walls. 

- some of the at- 
lanned by Paul 

• ransit Authority’s 
ect 

naica-Van Wyck 
station (near 
■nue), only partly 
will have a 


Sao Paulo Line tional air travelers can arrive S T yIvania u wh v ° work » Ne v w 

In 1974, because of «ve« quickly in .the heart of Paris. M*” 
financial problems, the dty Vienna is carefully digging “f h . ouses 01 the Legislature 
SS “ ^ as ‘<* “Mttvc- a huge hole for a new station “ d , ls .awa.bng Governor 
tion of new «ibway lines to a t SL Stefan’s Cathedral, and Byrnes signature. The repeal 
rV. e .,i , i 0ne r ** J *j™ e ’ . route by 1980 it expects to have had been part of the tax pack- 
unterfiSf ‘ new “saver-arrow” U-bahn age signed into law last month 

5KS to AStoto wa?S trains 5^ ing under f e , fa - to Governor. He is aspect- 

g^STSA.’-ag SSKSWslS 

Q“«ns. Prater amusement park. The expected windfall was to 

tivfty IOO Lu t ra i nd >Jr 0r w„?M New York Problems have “ caruKl “ New Yt >* state 

l v arouna the world __ _ , . _ — not the taxpayer — because 

shows such extensive S3o Paulo opened its first » T „ - . ** 3 . . 

projects as a 30-mile network four miles of subway line in Ncw farcy’s personal-mcomef 


— ■ . ■•“Vi* kjj way uj. 

Sunnyside and Forest Hills. 
Queens. 

. A look at underworld ac- 
tivity around the world 
shows such extensive 
projects as a 30-mile network 
underway in S&o Paolo and 
15 miles under construction- 
in Vienna. Various existing* 
and planned lines have fea- 
tures and. modern' touches 
not even envisioned here. 

In Moscow, ’for example, 
digital clocks over the tracks 
click off the seconds and 
minutes to show- when the 
next clean two-tone .subway 
train will glide into a monu- 
mental marble station, often 






mwuppi 





l section of the Lexington Avenue station of new 63d Street Line to Queens 


windows to let 
bt, and a 25- 
nd platfoxm. 
lOt-Jong station 
itreet between 
Third Avenues 
eet below the 
a three-stage 
ring stairs, the 
sed m the local 
! operate at 
feet a minute. 

new udder- 
ins — -from 63d 
hattan to Par- 
i in downtown 
aw— will have 
3 running, in 
9 between the 
l the street 


with a woman in a neat navy 
blue uniform at the controls. 

Usually it is a matter of 
two or three, minutes be- 
tween trains, even late in the 
evening.' Very high - speed 
moving stairs whisk passen- 
gers' to ppd from the street 
level' (without changes) at 
the rate of ISO feet a minute. 
That is twice as fast' as exist- • 
ing moving stairs in the sys- 
tem here arid 60 percent fast- 
er than the . new moving 
stairs to be used on. 63d 
Street •„ . ; 

Munich U-bahn 


four miles of subway line in s P«avuai-mcunie. 

1974 and is moving rapidly ^uc will be at the rate of 2 
ahead on additional lines. Rio percent to-. 2.5 percent of ad- 
de Janeiro is far advanced justed gross income, whereas 

s fis&rssss sss rr utw « 

will connect Ipanema, Co- the ^“frseac y Transportation 
pacabana and other outlying Tax; is levied at the same rate 
areas with the city’s center, as New York State’s income tax 
And Rome is shaking up — *2 percent to 15 percent of 
things at the Baths of Diode- adjusted gross income, 
tian in bmneling a major new Worker Totals Involved 
hne for its metropolitana. _ enftnnxt v . 

In New York the rnn- The 80,000 New Yorkers who 
in. New yotx; t^e con- work m New Jersey will be sub- 
ject to the new income tax 
once it is “operative. Under the 
original repeal. New York State 
would have then picked up the 
difference between the two 
rates. 

While the commuter tax is 
imposed on both residents of 
New Jersey who work in New 
York— about 210,000 persons— 
and New Yorkers, who work in 
New Jersey, residents of the 
Garden State can offset the tax 
by deducting money paid to 
New York under that state’s in- 
come tax. 

The bill on Governor Byrne’s 
desk would also delete the re- 
peal of the commuter tax on 
residents of Pennsylvania, which 
has a 2 percent tax on gross 
income. 

Assemblyman Richard Van 
- Vagner, chairman of the Assem- 
bly Taxation Committee, said 
that if the measure was signed 
into law it would give New 
Jersey “increased leverage” in 
an effort to wrest a reciprocal 
taxation agreement from New 

Ctrl StreetT iiwtn nniwnq York state whereby each state 
53d Street Line to Queens wouId ^ allowed to tax its own 

residents working in the neigh- 
« , , boring state. 

ramts are fiscal and physi- - . . . 

j. 1*, Payments to New York 


straints are fiscal and physi- 
cal: There is a lack of money 
for new lines and, at least 


for new lines and, at least . However, New Jersey jes- 
ter the present, for a multi- ’ d 2 n p a ay “ estimated $150 

pie-fare system based on 

tlrWc AnH tWo State m income taxes and while 


Youngsters apply makeup before taking part in a one-day seminar on downing at the West Side YJVl.CA. 

Children Get ‘Face Lift ’ and Clown About 

By JUDY KLEMESRUD 

Ronald McDonald, the red-wigged 
clown who represents a certain ham- 
burger chain, visited the West Side 
Branch of the Y.M.CA. yesterday and 
taught 60 youngsters the art of down- 
ing around. 

There was more than just crass com- 
mercialism behind his visit; there was 
also an angle. 

“This happens to be National Clown 
Week," he told the youngsters. - who 
were 9 to 13 years old and enrolled in 
the •Y’s day camp, “and since you’re 
all a bunch of clowns, I decided to 
come here.” 

The youngsters howled. 

‘Have to Love People’ 

Ronald, who in real life is a former 
actor named Irwin Best,- picked six 
would-be Emmett Kellys from the audi- 
ence — three boys and three giri^-and 
taught them how to apply down's 
makeup. Under his direction, the six 
smeared white makeup all over their 
faces, painted on oversized red lips 
and added ersatz eyebrows and eye- 
lashes with a black grease pencil. 

*To be a clown, you have to love 
people and understand people and make 
people laugh,” he told the youngsters in 
a somewhat serious tone in the George 
Washington Lounge of the Y.M.CA., at 
5 West 63d Street. “But never take on 

an unfortunate person and make fun . 

of him. The fun has to be in good taste.” . T . - Wrrt „ r ^ ...... _ . . J 1 * tibm/j «* mmim* 

Ronald, who was wearing his usual Irmn ^ a fonner aCt0r - » res PM, P Porter ’ ,3 > some P°” ters 

red fright wig and his red and yellow ' , , 

jumpsuit with the golden arches on the . ft’s fun putting on . all this stuff.” sters thought was the best part of the 
pockets, also showed the youngsters a said one young clown, Richard Maltz show: He passed out 60 tickets good 
few simple magic tricks. He then gave “hut I wouldn’t want to do it for for one free hamburger and one order 
the volunteer “clowns” white rag-mop a living- I have my mind all set to be of french fries at a hamburger chain, 
wigs, and told them they need not spend a baseball player or -a. football player.” ‘This was a gas » Gregory' Baranszky, 
a lot of money on down costumes^ Ronald McDonald ended Ms hour-long 10. of Manhattan said after the show! 
their fathers’ old clothes, fancily fes- demonstration in honor ‘ of "National “It sure beats throwing my friend Regis 




ft, V *- 

r 

£¥§:. M 

^ ' ' * 

L J 



tooned, would do nicely. 


magnetic tickets. And there ^ 
is a lack of space under nar- ^ ^ 

5^=5*^ State, Suing Hollander , 

M? 15 co .^^5. nt still be to New York’s advant- rs -« , . 


■Clown Week with what some young- around on the wrestling mat.” 


that ' local -riders will like a p e to 
what they see in the new sta- formula, 
tions. N aw ^ 


present 


Seeks to Freeze Assets MetropoUtan Briefe 


9 hetwhen the * stations of the 

9 new U-bJn, or subway fea-' 

^n, cpTfr'-ture handsome, commodious 
* of obstruct- topping arcades ta the mez- 
in addition, all zamn* ticket-vending- roa- 
wve eLectronic chines, for a. multiple-fare 
s, continuous system and_ easy poving- 
noise-suppress- stair connections to the mmn 
is. at least one railway station and the 
jj trance, eleva- streetcar network, 
indicapped, air to Paris, the new regional 
summer, token - express rail network contin- 
wkh the turn- ues to expand under the 
etter control, heart of the--city as a com-, 
slevision moni- .. bined commuter and. super- 
dress systems, subway system. Its stations, 
ng and “corf- such as the one under the 
asing ddcors.” Arc de Triomphe. are lax^e 
ns will be air- and handsomely-styled, with 
■ ■ . wide waiting platforms, auto- 

to Mr. Katz; matic ticketing and shopping 


ng and “conf- 
using dticors.” 
ns will be air- 


to Mr. Katz, 
- j - found-.- in re^ 
. »ted and tood- 
. is.of tbeexist- 


areas. Its trains are so quiet- 'J a 

that a visitor is surprised to .^ e constifucted in Woodside 


see that they have steel 


int to the qual- wheels running on steel rails. 



nons. - New York residents working ' 

The underground stations in New Jersey now pay about 
on the Manhattan -Queens S39 million a year in commuter By -JOHN L. HESS 

ta ^' * p ,1 The New York State Attorney a statement filed by Mr. Hoi- 

thif^ GraOTl - Louis j. Loftowite, I«,der UsUng his ass« s at the 
Sixty-tnml Street dg tween ucictuig ujg rcpcnJ or tAc-cozn* • T - • , u • . » . , 

Lex ingtim and Thirf Avenue, muter tax warn that such' a maved Y****** to attach the beginnmg of this year at 
Roosevelt Island. move was unconstitutional in fortune of Eugene Hollander, $17,882,000, his liabilities at 

Twenty -first Street and that it would i mpos e a different whom the state is suing over $9,114,000 and his resulting net 
41st Avenue in Long Island rate structure on outjrf- alleged Medicaid frauds and worth at $8,768,000. The listed 
City. state residents than that lm- penalties totaling $10 million, assets included six nursing 

,ine . expressways service to pay the mcome tax and the corporations they own be They did not include the col- 

frozen - to insure that there lection of French paintings that 
■ Sntpfiifl ana • Parsons which . 15 now before the Gov- would be funds to nay any Mr ttotto rvior erimiffmi l._ l-j 
B oulevards ou Archm- Ave- eraor. states that commuters judgment, following what it be .J^. d 

toie. • wiU have to pay the greater of g3tol wiSdl?^ W b0U8 ^J y faisely *** 

- In addition, the 71st Ave- two taxes, with propor- tracted suit” purchase as nursing-home ex- 

hue-Continental Avenue sta- donate amounts of the revenue Mr. Hollander pleaded guilty penses. If they are still owned 
tion of the Queens Avenue being earmarked for the emer- fast February to Federal Med- by Mr. Hollander they will be 
line will be reconstructed to sency. transportation tax ac- icare frauds involving $191,000 attached with other holdings if 

accommodate the_ new cognt . • and to parts of a state indict- me motion is granted. 

Queens line op two levels. 7 | ~ meet charging $2.5 million in Mi M k ^ j listice 

^ *" '? ta ?S n ?.l 0 LOTTERY NUMBER $6 3 Sfi Department said it would move 

be constructed in Woodside - 19?6 see^ to r^yer $6.3 ml- in , Fede ral Court in Brooklyn 

to parallel the main line of ; bonrn frauds and $3.7 to Hollander in default 

the Long Island Ron Road. N. J.Pick-It 081 The raog papers 

" said he could not pay because 

J I JnAtr* Remember* tiie state was holding up rent 

L. 1. J udge Remembers paymettts t0 ^ from ^ non . 

And 2 Suspects Sutter profit organizations that have 

^ leased two of bis homes. 


Queens fine op two levels. 
And a surface 'station is to 


to parallel the main line of 
the Long Island R«ul Road. 


LOTTERY NUMBER 
Ang. 6, 1976 

N. J.Pick-It — 081 


i l. bess Train Speed to Be Cut Near Crash Site 

a statement filed by Mr. Hoi- ’The speed limit will be reduced on the tracks near 
lander listing his assets at the last month’s fatal, train collision in New Canaan, Conn., 

be ginnin g of this vear at P €ndirrg *“ e outcome of state and Federal investigations. 

*17 882 non h« linhiiit ipc a t Sta rting Monday , all trains must stop at a yellow warning 

la vSdnn 0 ’ jk - * «ght on the approach to the New Canaan station and then 

$9,114,000 and his resulting net finish the approach at no more than 5 miles per hour, 

worth at $8,768,000. The listed the State Transportation Commissioner, James F. Shugrue, 

assets included six nursing ordered The yellow light, which will soon be replaced 

homes — two of them in opera- by a . more sophisticated warning light, . now limits the 

tion — 11 ptber properties and . station approach to 15 m.p.h. 

$222,000 in stocks. _ # ■ 

They did not include the coi- : Inquiry Into Police Officer Asked 

lection of French paintings that The Town Board of East Hampton, L.I., has asked the 
Mr. Hollander admitted he had Suffolk County Civil Service Commission to study the case 
bought by falsely billing their of a yoiipg police officer who has been suspended from 
purchase as nursing-home ex- duty because of alleged false statements in his job ap- 
peases. If they are still owned plieation. The officer, Patrolman Alex Wasilewski, was said 
by Mr. Hollander they will be t0 - have failed to report a previous arrest for disorderly 

attached with other holdings if conduct aijd the fact that he had been treated for a 

the motion is granted. mental problem. Eugene Haas, the Town Supervisor, said 

Earlier this week the Justice J* *» cou «y agency and 

Department said it would move that on lts fmduJ « *we will take it from there.” 
in- Federal Court in Brooklyn 

to hold. Mr. Hollander in default Banker Sentenced to One Year 

of repayments he was sebed- . . 

uled to maif0 to Medicare. He Frank c. Paul, a 57-year-old fonner senior vice prefi- 
said he could not pay because de , nt . of the Long Island Trust Company branch at £act 
the state was holding up rent Williston, L.L, was sentenced to one year iii prison for 

payments to him from the non- embezzling $95,300 from his bank last year. Judge George 

profit organizations that have C. Pratt, sitting in Brooklyn Federal Court noted that Mr. 
leased two of bis homes. Paul would be eligible for parole after serving three 

. HICKSVIIX^ L. L, Aug. 6 VS. Action Dropped months. 

— A Nassau County District The Federal action was _ f „ ’ . 

Court judge who helped pass dropped when the State ..Bronlinflll OUSpcCt Out tor FlUlcrSi 

a law two years ago when, he SjjKl t?p P wJl ei Th ( fMprf?rairt Dominic Byrne, an alleged accomplice in the kid- 
sat on the Oyster Bay Town JSm 2 wSI?t£n- as Dapping ° f heir Samuel Bronfman 2d, will be 

Council, got a chance to en- to "the Medicare administration. ■ tera PoranJy reused from the Westchester County Jail to 
fnreft that law eariv this ■ attend ^ 5 brother’s funeral today. The permission was 

morning.. be £ Stte te ^ ^ “ State S"" 1 *™ c »“rt in 


Future rent payments would 
be frozen, however, under the 


When Judge Warren Doo- I reOTrer^‘tiS very Mr ' Byrne » wfl o has been in custody for 10 months, 

little was getting ready to W been^wrong- • be accompanied by guards. He and his co-defendant, 

.ieave for court this morning fujjy received by defendants.” 1561 Patrick Lynch, are to go on trial Sept 16. 


he noticed two men in front The leases on the twq homes 
of his house loading bundled tota j $472,000 a year. A third 

has been privately leased as a 
track. Judge Doolittle, who warehouse. Negotiations have 
had voted whi le a Council- stalled on the leasing of two 
roan for a newspaper re- others to charitable groups, 
cycling program in the town. Investigators looking into the 
became suspicious because ownerships of day-care centers 
the two men were using .a this week found that several 
private truck rather than a belonged to a close aide of Mr. 


town vehicle. 

The judge called the police. 


Hollander's, Martin R. Rochlin. 
Mr. Rochlin is listed in the teJe- 


who arrested the two men phone directory at the former 
for the unlawful removal of Congress Nursing Home, now 
material for collection. The renamed the Cobble Hill, where 


men were identified as Ar- rallg are referred to “his secre- 
thur Adams. 36 years old of tary ” That person said he no 
Holtsvilie. and Robert Pi on- longer worked there, but occa- 
tefc, 23, of Massapequa. sionaliy called for messages. 


Holtsvilie. and Robert Pion- 
tefc, 23, of Massapequa. 

The suspects, however, wifi 
not appear before Judge Doo- 
little, who sits in Mineola. 


GIVE FRESH AIR FUND • 
COUNTRY FUN FOR KIDS 


From the Police Blotter: 

A -fight between two cousins who apparently had 
been drinking resulted in the fatal knifing of one of them, 
. Augustine Gomez, 28 years, old, of 23 Clinton Street, in 
front of 170 Delancey Street on the Lower East Side. Ar- 
rested for homicide was Manuel Torres, 20. of 1223 

Franklin- D. Roosevelt Drive, in the Jacob Riis Houses 

<JAn unidentified man in his 20's was found bludgeoned 
■ to death, apparently with a two-by-four in front of 8881 
1 5th Avenue in the Bath Beach section of Brooklyn. The 
police thiiik he may have committed a burglary In the 
neighborhood and then 'was caught and beaten by his 
victim, assisted by friends. . . . *?The body of Raymond 
Rimerez, 46, of 914 Metropolitan Avenue in the Greenpoint 
section of Brooklyn, who was free on $5,000 bail on a 
charge of killing a neighborhood man three months ago, 
was found in a refuse can on Meeker Avenue near the 
ramp of ‘the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, three blocks 
from his home. He had been shot in the head. 








L 




family /style 


: — iiiL—iL, U.i » tiuuuiii /, 12 i <J 





Apartments for the Aged 
And Health Care for Lift 


Sprdd to TS* Sew feme Tlaar 


ABINGTON, Pa.— It looked like the lobby 
of a fancy resort hotel, complete with a 
busy front desk and gift shop; then a 
woman was wheeled through on a white 
hospital table and no one batted an eye. 

As she was lifted into a waiting van, 
people in the lobby picked- up their mall 
and strolled off into a huge living room — 
slowly, for they were ail older people, 
many well over 65. 

The lobby was the entrance to Rydal 
Park, a new residence for; those 65 and 
over, sponsored by the Presbytery of Phila- 
delphia, and one of a new type of church- 
sponsored retirement communities that are 
growing here in the Philadelphia area and 
in other parts of the country. 

The woman, who was on her way to 
a hospital, was one of the Rydal Park resi- 
dents who had paid a large entrance fee, 
ranging from $11,000 to $42,000, plus a 
monthly fee. 

Guaranteed Medical Care 

In return, Rydal Park gives her an apart- 
ment, meals, cleaning and linen service, 
plus guaranteed medical care and medi- 
cines for life. The community will pay for 
her hospital care, and then take her back 
into its nursing wing, provide rehabilitative 
therapy and eventually move her back into 
her apartment 

Rydal Park is different from older 
church-sponsored homes because it offers 
medical care for life plus private Irving 
quarters, ranging from a studio (entrance 
fee $11,000 and monthly fee $385) to a 
two-bedroom apartment ( entrance fee $42,- 
000 and monthly fee $845). It also offers 
a pleasant condominium atmosphere, free- 
dom to run the community's activities and 
a voice in the management Residents will 
help choose a bank for the lobby this fall. 

Many older church-sponsored homes 
offer double rooms and dorms. In many, 
residents must leave if their funds run out 
or if they need nursing care. Many such 
homes are human warehouses, with a pro- 
gram director who runs activities, a 
"parental style -of administration" that is 
gone from these new residences. 

Since the middle 1960's, Rydal Park and 
four similar communities have opened in 
the Philadelphia suburbs, sponsored by the 
Presbyterians and the Quakers. 

Southwest of the city in Kennett Square. 
Cross lands, a new Quaker community 
scheduled to open next year, is completely 
sold out. Nearby, at another Quaker com- 
munity, Kendal' at Longwood, no hope is 
given to those on the waiting list 

At Rydal Park, which Is two years old, 
the waiting list is 400 for 323 units. A 
large addition was opened last June and 
the Philadelphia Presbytery has decided 
not to add any more units. 

About 375 people live in apartments in 
the community, plus 120 more in a nursing 
wing. The community is a series of con- 
nected three-story buildings, situated in a 


pastoral setting on the edge of a shopping 
center, close to transportation, major de- 
partment stores and center-city Philadel- 
phia (20 minutes by train). 

On a recent day, Warren Schoenly waited 
in the lobby for a friend and a luncheon 
date.in Center City. Mr. Schoenly has lived 
in Rydal Park since it opened and is a 
member of the Germantown Presbyterian 
Church, which founded the community. 

“I came here because of the guaranteed 
medical care and' the convenience," he said, 
*T don't have a car and I go into town 
a good bit to the orchestra and for lunch. 
1 can walk to the station." 

Katharine Lackey was in the medical 
care unit, waiting to see her doctor. She 
explained that she and her sister had sold 
their home in nearby Jenkintowh to enter 
Rydal Park. 

“Our house and garden took care," she 
said. “We gave them up, but .we miss the 

g arden. We heed Someplace to have care 
l case one of us needs it We're Presbyte- 
rians and feel at home here. We have 
many, many friends here and made a tot 
of new friends." 

About 50 percent of the residents- at 
Rydal Park are Presbyterian. The average 
age is 78. 

Exhibits Paintings 

Sarah E. Brower said she came to Rydal 
Park because her doctor became bead of 
the medical unit. She is having an exhibi- 
tion of her paintings .at Rydal Park now 
and said she often attends movies and 
other events sponsored by the residents' 
association. 

Richard Stephan., director, said prospec- 
tive residents must prove they can meet 
the monthly charge and qualify medically. 
He said that this meant if a person .suffered 
from a chronic illness such as a mental 
disorder, Rydal Park may ask for a medical 
exemption for that specifically. 

“For Presbyterians, if they have limited 
funds, we accept their applications and 
seek funds elsewhere,* 1 he explained. “If any 
resident’s funds run out, it’s our. responsi- 
bility to keep them." 

He said that residents had 50 months 
to live at Rydal Park and get their entrance 
fee back if they decided to leave. 

Mr. Stephan helped plan and design 
Rydal Park and on a tour of the communi- 
ty, knew most of the residents by name. 

Frances M. Suarez, who has just com- 
pleted her 14-month term as president of 
the residents' association, organized 26 
committees, with four or five people on 
each committee, during her tenure. Miss 
Suarez, originally from Philadelphia, was 
Irving aione in an apartment in nearby 
Glenside before moving to Rydal Park 
three weeks after it opened. 

"I had a heart attack and decided, since 
I'm alone, I needed the assurance of a 
medical center nearby," she said. This is 
the nearest thing to apartment living I 
could get It's certainly a lot of fun." 


-j8y^RNAI^MDkRlS 


PARIS— The impact > of .-Yves ' jSfHftV' 
Laurent's glorified -peasant collection' sOTt"- : . 
many Viewers ' rushing'- over to fee SSIa&v 
! des Congrfes- at: the >Porte Mafilot /hfere, 
where a retrospecttve'esiibitioti called -“A-*} 
Century of Paris Conferee has -Tafen ip- - 
stalled since the bqginmfrg o? :fee summer.- ;- , 

By submerging themselves m_a-historIca3 ' : 
perspective, they hoped to Rostand 
ter the changes Safatlhuzmat 4bad intrtkf - 
ducedi with his presentation of bouffont \ 
shirts, small waistlines and 'telitistluxuty/. 
paradoxically within a peasant silhouette. 

“rim going to find the biggest- Balenda;- . 
gas and stare at- them .until Ir put -myself 
m the mood flgBifl," an American b^r 7 
observed. 

She was d!sappoihtied--4here were nohig'/ 
Balenciagas, just a : couple of. his- short ~= 
evening dresses and a printed, crepe dresv 
afffrom the 1950’s. 

' . The French Union .of Arts and; Costume , ^ 
which sponsored fee exhibition, didn't- an- -' 
tlcipato the buyer’s need, . •' 

Spfaidid Examples-- v : ^ ' 


^orth, who -is .regard 
• fatter of fee French. couture, ant 
.'Saint- XaureiLfs geometrical -M 
I>ehifts. and . pwts&ges’.s 
,-bfthemid- 1960 , S.V 
_ year, YvoimesIJeslandi? 

Union, who orf ■: 
an exposition of sf 


"Those seeking Dioris New Look, to which 
Saint Laurent's clothes were immediately 
compared, were not disappointed: There 
were two splendid examples of the wasp- 
waisted suits that changed the world in 
1947, one with- a black ideated wool skirt, 
topped by an ivory tightly fitted silk jacket, 
and one with a wool jacket embroidered 
with pearls and gold paillettes. 

The differences. between the New -Look 
and what is being called Saitot Laurent's 
New New Look were also apparent Dior’s 
styles were fitted within an inch of their 
lives; padding at the hipline enforced the 
hourglass silhouette. They obviously were 
made for a corseted body. Saint Laurent's 
obviously are not Though. Ks skirts are 
perhaps even wider and there are corselet 
belts at the waistline, nothing is. cinched 
in tightly. Fashion doesn't ever repeat itself 
in precisely -the same manner.. . 

There were obvious gaps in the- presenta- 
tion. There were only a few Poirets avail- 
able because the union had sent much of 
its collection to fee Fashion Institute of. 
Technology’s current exhibition in' New 
York. The designer's widow had to be en- 
treated to send a few dresses from her' • 
own collection. One is a stunning prototyp- 
ical beaded, chemise of 1925. 

All that Jerry Silverman and Shannon 
Rodgers, bis associate in the Seventh Ave- - 
nue dress .business that bears his name, 
could talk about were the “two magnifi- 
cent Mainbochers.” 

"They looked exactly like Norell’s. said 
Mr. Silverman. 

The two long dresses of 1935 were en- 
tirely embroidered in sequins, like fee 
beaded mermaid dresses Norman Norell 
was later to make his signature; his compa- 
ny still is producing th em 

The collection opens with a mid-1860's 
aggressively curved dress by Charles 


Sbehdpes eventually to orgt 
\ maiient costunie museum in Par - 

V • rTftf Unbelievable that there 
. thing, here. fee. center of wotf 
' ste^ -said."- . ^ . 

■ J -The ''-current "exposition ini! 
there/ is- a great cultural lag l 
'-.'quality of historical preseritatji 
: unrffepsestaged hy-the Metre 
senm bf Art’s Costume Instil . 
/Ta^cm' Institute of Technology 
' schOol, in New York, . v . ? 

backgrounds of thePai 
. primitive lighting- is a bright 
4-&nd' the,, mannequins are sb 
'riplantfe;pn green rugs.with.fc - 
. thenv as d the: White walls' a . 
between 'life: rooms would bd . \ 
for.a computer dlqjlay. / --- 

felt the cloth&s aresonfeS,. 
skill of the: worfananship and 
and the luxury of fee fabriejp." ■ ' 
! ing to anyone with an.tmderet N i. 
ever primitive, of dressmaking. ' ” ' 

Sociological Significance : - 

The exposition^ fasdnatw) 
ical grounds too, . telling as 
the changes in -society as.the 
of pottery reveals in., archec 

In the simplification of clol 
complexities. of. fee 19th ca 
ups and downs' of the fceinim 
freeing of 'the woman’s fige 
as a cpmmefltaiy ohfee~ 
women. ’ • 

Hemlines began .to show fir 
fore World War- 1, plunged c ' ' 
the early 1920’s hefot^faiee ' 
o ver in the middle' of the/ 
descended again in fee 1J& 
almost to -the knfes becara 
shortages during World/War ' 
ble poverty of the wat year 
of the coliitariers wetejcdHat ' 
lustrated by three feed-lookin' 

Dior’s fashion revolution . in " 

. . skirts down again; afld/broug 1 . .. 

. coats and waidnippere.Vl ' 
^'clothes for a decade, makin 
turn - of - the - century figure 
again. A Patou dress of the J - 
same hourglass shape fed - 
Worth style of .1900,' drai 
confluence. 

The collection, made up 
couturiers and customers, rat 
after the 1930's. But there ii 
the grandeur of. the early pe 1 
one of the glories of the Freni- 


From left: 

Worth, 1868 
Chanel, 1915 
Mainbocher, 1935 . 


Several women 
residents at Rydal 
Park, a church- 
sponsored retirement 
community , wait 
for a bus to take them 
shopping. Sara 
Randolph , left, looks 
out over the 
development from the 
patio of her 
apartment . Below, 
Maude Roens works on 
a loom in the 
rehabilitation area 
of community’s 
medical facilities . 


TteNw Yoris Tlmas/Krifb Moran 


From left: 

Dior, 1947 ‘ 
PatOU, 1950 
ourreges, 1565 
aint 

Laurent,"! 955 . 

• - - ■neHwYfe-T 


l 


Tbs New York Tines/ J« Tranr 

Aaron Allen Hand cuts and tastes a 
melon as part of his quality control . 

Out in the Field, 
Searching for 
Melon Perfection 

By HAROLD FABER 

S?«ctol to Tfie Ttori Times 

GREENWICH. N.Y., Aug. 5 — Like the Persian lung of 
' fable who waited for the right second of the right minute 
of the right hour of tile right day to pick his melons at 
fee peak of perfection. Aaron Allen Hand has been going 
out to his melon fields for days now, testing for the 
moment when his famous Hand melons are ready for 
market. 

Shortly after 7 o’clock this morning, Mr. Hand made 
another trip to one field of his farm here and again began 
to look for the telltale sign of a mature melon — a, light 
yellowing of the green peeking through the bright green 
leaves of the vines. 

He spotted a few and then used what his wife, Carol, 
called the thumb-pressure test:. If the stem breaks off 
with a flick of the thumb, the melon is ready to be picked.' 

Four melons met that test Then Mr. Hand applied his 
ultimate test — taste. He took out a pocket knife, cut 
wedges into each and tasted his samples. Three of them 
qualified for his No. 1 rating — the sweet, juicy, luscious 
muskmelons that most people call canteloupes and that 
some gourmets consider to be the finest melon they have 
ever eaten. - 
Late Crop 

But Mr. Hand was only relatively happy. His melons 
were finally coming in, but the crop is at least 10 days 
late, missing the opening of the racing season at Sara- 
toga, only 15 miles to the west, where his melons for 
breakfast are almost as famous as the horses. A year ago 
today, he and his farmworkers picked 524 bushels, 13 
melons to a bushel. 

“It's usually a six-week picking season, but it won’t 
be this year," he said, pointing out that the yield always 
ended in early September. "Each year is different. I think 
the fast good year we had was 1971.” 

If the yield is small, a lot of people will be disappointed. 
In the roadside stand down the road, there are clippings 
on the wall of Red Smith columns noting that the Sara- 
toga Race Course is famous for two things— horses and 
Hand melons for breakfast in the clubhouse. 

Last year, The Country Journal had a long article on 
the melons under the headline, "Is This the World's Best 
Melon?” with the answer in several thousand words get- 
ting down to one word, "Yes." 

Distinguished Clientele 

In his home, Mr. Hand has a framed letter from Dwight 
D. Eisenhower congratulating him for the superb melon 
the President had for breakfast on Sept 6, 1956. 

By next week, it is hoped. Hand melons will be coming 
in by the thousands ■ and going out to impatient con- 
sumers throughout the Northeast who have been calling 
and writing to order the melons, which normally grace 
the tables of famous restaurants, corporate dining rooms 
and private clubs at this time of year. 

About a third of the crop is sold locally or at a road- 
side stand here in Greenwich, which, unlike its name- 
sakes in England and Connecticut, is pronounced Green- 
witch), a third to "wholesalers and the remaining third by 
mail order. 

The mature melons, which- usually weigh about three 
and a half pounds, will sell for 3S cents a pound at the 
roadside stand here on Route 29, up 5 cents from last 
year because of a short supply and higher cost. By mail, 
a box of nine melons will cost $20 plus shipping charges. 

Only his Nq. 1 melons get the white label with the red 
hand an it that guarantees them to be authentic Hand 
melons. The No. 2 mellons which will sell for 26 cents a 
pound, are not as sweet and are not labeled, be said. 

One interesting aspect of Hand melons is feat they are 
varieties that anybody can buy and grow from seeds — 
Gold Star and Saticoy — both available from the Joseph 
Hams Seed Company-in Rochester. 

Mr. and Mrs. Hand sat around fee table on their porch 
here and tried to explain what made fee difference! be- 
tween their melons and the ones that most people grow 
at home or buy at a supermarket • * 

Picked at Maturity 

The key difference, they said, is that their melons are 
picked at maturity, if a fruit is picked before maturity! it 
can never develop its full potential of sweetness, Mr 
Hand said. ° 

The melon operation started with his father, Allen 
Furman Hand, who started with dairy cows but devoted 
one acre to melons in' 1925 and sold them for $500. 

After two years at Dartmouth, one year at the Agricul- 
tural School at Cornell and three years In the Army, the 
younger Mr. Hand joined his father as a fanner after 
World War II. 

The farm now consists of 342 acres with 100 acres ' 
more rented. On it, Mr. Hand grows sweet com for peo- 
ple, field com for cows, alfalfa for hay and soybeans for 
processing, in addition- to melons. 

"The soij is sandy and relatively dry," he said ‘7fs 
ideally suited for melons and strawberries." 

This afternoon, Mr. Hand went back into the fields. He 
found one more mature melon, cut a wedge and offered 
it to a visitor.' 1 

“Hbw.daes it taste?" he asked. , ‘ 

"That is good," she replied, emphasising each word. 

■' "Thats what most people say," he said 












SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1976 





ir Bonds Marketed 
. Averagelnferest !•: 
ate of m%~ ' . 


LLION TENDERED 

age FrorA 7*98% to 
/o— Price Works .. 
i to 99.893% 








5 USINESS/FINANCE 


Savings Banks Add 
Checking Accounts 


Treasury Audit of U.S.R.A. Mts ^ 5fafe Have Opened 255,245 

Finds Financing of Golf . . , 

Club Memberships Since Their Legalization in May 



The wubtartea star 

WASHINGTON, Aug. 6— A 


By TERRY ROBARDS 

The savings banks of Newition, the savings banks are now 


KSSSS M »pSr fey with com- 

checking accounts with $89.7 mercial banks for the checking 

million m deposits since check- account deposits of consumers, 
has round wnat it considers to rnr thrift * th* 0 c«u>iarinn 


pihf;l 

n[wiiT^ 




■rmiiTrn 



LL^K 




**>*•* 

l 

1 


manage 

rs 

ted ^10 

J6 

and Ion 

g- 

. week 

to 


' 3£rSftL2 SjfiLfS ** *5**® S accounts ' 

fidals^ « ^ ew State. However, the increase in 

U S R. A/s directors reacted Besides tbe^new checking ac- checking accounts and cfceck- 
to the audit by saying that the “““Jr*. the . “f®S5 tl0n “6 deposits in savings banks 

association’s actions had been reported yesterday, I6U96 so- does not necessarily mean they 
proper and by adopting a reso- caU “ payment-order'’ ac- are winning converts from 
lution malting it’ a policy that jy^^s already existed in the commercial banks. A number 
no director undertake an inde- P nor , to _ *“® “® w of savings bankers have report- 

pendent audit of the association ? hus ’ a totaI of 4I6,4 ^f. check- ed that most of their checking 
without the approval of the I * ow ,. Wlth accounts are being opened by 

board. - * $146.9 million m deposits. individuals who already held 

The NewYArkTunas/TereaZatoia xhe resolution was a direct " I ? )e payment-order accounts, savings accounts at the same 
.Roderick M. BSRs, the chairman of the S.E.G, before he testified in Washington. him were, from the left; slap at Under Secretary of the which are equivalent to check- institutions. 

Bernard Fried end Kenneth Allen of In vestment Data Corporation and William Chatlos of Georgeson & Company. Treasury Jerry Thomas, who “f T* 16 Savings Banks Associa- 

s represent the Treasury on the «?*, ne ^ legislation but were Goo reported a net deposit in- 

: r : U.SRA. board, and wbo bad declared illegal by the .State ncw of $72 ^ujon in July. 

S TTi ri ||jr tti t ut j c t 1* . n r* . • ordered the., audit after he be- Supreme Court last December. (Spared to an outflow of 585 

# KL Mav&nd Weed tor Immediate Confirmation aware that the asso**- mmion m j^e and an mnow 

mn.jp. WA1U Aiimiuuiatv V ^'- / - LAJ - AA UiaUUll tion was paying dues and initia- through the State Legislature to of $ S 5 million in JuJv of last 

r TT w • • - - m . , » . - n . lion fees at country clubs and obviate the courts ruling. year. It is too early to deter- 

In Writing by Stockbrokers for Some Transactions S£k c " ,bs for iB “ p +£e£E?SSS* 

— t 1 — _ Among the abuses cited by mg accounts was fairly steady promotion of checking accounts 

!°^ D ; H ^ iHEV,r - "If tanks aad broker, are tolwib added a couple of bie owolbe one step the commieeion the ,*ES7 "eSdjSUing so SKfSJKJ’tk'M . 

ipecdoj to Tte Bew.Yort Tima compete in SUDOlvinp services, todav. although he noted that could take toward eHminstinp loppy . .. , - m 77 c arwmnfeTan't-h O. Scott, _ executive vice 


1 ** fc ' “* banks and brokers ar e to Hills added a couple of his own be one step the commission ” qsiS^^re^rf^oing so oy me tnnrr instinmons. 

8 ****? _ compete in supplying services, today, although he noted that could take toward eliminating the^association’s* records 133,735 of these accountewith ^ °V Sc 9 tt ;, executlv ®_J lce 

81 WASHINGTON, Aug. 6— The the outcome of this competition the commission had never the discriminatory burden 00 S, not show on whom $35 000 $44-3 mill i nn in deposits. In pr ?i ld ,l nt ^ of % associat j°?. 

scunttes and Exchange Cora- certainly should not be deter- decided whether such a propos- brokers. Banks are only loosely ? n entertainment exoenses were uly the totals were 121^10 JJ 1 * m 

lssio ° may relieve stockbro- mined by unequal regulatory al would violate the law that regulated in their securities eoent^d^tee th^fSt nine ccounts with $45.4 million in ^ P atteTn of flows 

» of the requirement that burdens/ Mr. Hills said. remiires a seoaration of com- transactions. s P ent . m was by no means indicative of 


it they send customers immediate Although banks have only mercial and Investment bank- ‘There are currently certain of tlTffltStims 

i written jniftatfcufe of, every gradually-«nd with indifferent ing. ^ „ limited ezeep£ns?! aTcon- 5SS 2** 

0 hransacbon, its chairman, success — been, edging into One question, Mr. Hills said, finnation rules, and there may qa Names and orgmiizations of 
Rodendc M. Hills, told a Senate brokerage areas that have been relates to the S.E.C.’s ability to welt be additional cases were Sisewbose mels were paid 
Securities subcommittee today, the province of brokers since conduct its normal market sur- brokers could offer services fTmre mt Sted-as they 
. jjbe disclosure by Mr. Hills, the depression, the subject has veillance. which would require periodic W0l j d j, ave to under Inter- 


IvSC I™ by ° o means indic ative of 

tires Because of the new legisla- ; Continued on Page27 r Co himn 3 


SecuritiM subcommittee today, the province of brokers since conduct its normal market sur- brokers could offer services fTmre mt Sted-as they 
The disclosure by Mr. Hills, the depression, the subject has veillance. which would require periodic wnil u j, ave +Q hg under Inter- 

0 which was said to have sur- become extremely controver- If a bank conducts its broker- statements rather than immedi- "7 r' vp recula- 

pnsed even some of his aides, sial. * ■ age business through a so- ate confirmations,” Mr. Hills SoL to be Maimed as bu^iess 

. came during hearings conduct- On Wednesday, during the called omnibus account; with a told the subcommittee. 

, ed by Senator Harrison A. WB- first day of the subcommittee's broker— in Chemical’s case it He said he fully accepted the ;nr i..j„ . ainner f nr 

1 liams .Tr nomnmt of Msm new mnn>l of hunniic DiamL tuniiM ha Pprchinir & Cnmnariv iwnnlai^ on rjmHipiCS include a . umntrr lor 


Unequal regulation of banks developing since last winter. Thus, possible manipulative W. Davant, chairman of Paine, « on ^ Vf- i-hT rh hftw'm 
’ and brokers, Mr. Hills declared, This would permit any bank orders or those using nonpublic Webber Inc., said his firm spent ^ me C,UD Ior w 

' has pot the brokers at a “sig- customer to buy stocks at com- company or market information $430,000 in mailing costs alone ^ !L:, aviation has en 

nificant competitive disadvan- mission < rates the bank said might -be difficult, or perhaps last year in sending its custom- t ly into ahmt^inMO worth 

: tage,” and if action by the com- could save the typical customer legally impossible, to uncover, erg confirmations of all orders, contracts; with former offi- 
r mission and the bank regulato- as much as 90 percent from he asserted. -- monthly statements and jL*.- Hme do the 

■ ry agencies did not put them what would be paid elsewhere. Relieving brokers of sending semiannual balance sheets. offirPr-T sraid rarrvtinp out I 

• on an equal footing he said his Senator Williams and hjs confirmation slips for some Mr. Hills added that, if the th • Z & 

i agency would seek help in Con- staff indicated their doubts transactions, an idea Mr. Hills — , it q r a that in one can ei 

: -1 m :-_n i w. ^ ot /' n i n - n , e leave U-O-K-A. maim one case 





0W-'- ' 'A ^ 

m • ‘ — ^ 

‘M*‘*‘* * * 


V- -- VJ- 

J 



Rate Is More' Than Wall St 
•• ExpebteiM)6w Average 
Down 0.68 in SfowDay 


about ChemicaTs plan and Mr. [said was under study, would ( Continued on Page 32, Column 5 nf ^ ww 

— ' T~ provided under a contract* that 

I- Changing Auto Industry 

fcsue« ; Since it bad no severance aDow- 

VcfcjmK, 1 ances or retirement benefits for 

SSt =**,»££ In Q uir y b ? U - S - Comin Z at Time When 

-fUf- issues 4 Makers Can Cite Bids to Compete 

• . - ^ A <Pj^P : program costs less in terms of 

a ’ By AGK SALPUKAS percentage of base saJary than 

I - ssMiaito ncitevTcrtTimc. that availaWe to Federal em- 

_ j£gj£ _ 477 DETROIT, Aug. 6— The dea- the Chrysler ^^ration aad p association employees, 

sion of the Federal Trade I American Motors Corpora- ^1,7,00 that they would be 
ABB Commission and the Justice non. Federal regulation and employ^ |jy the U.S.RA. only 

Draviii w-v ■ ■ r* _a I efe twio rH c on oil* fiiiflli Kr fltin * "a ■■ a - 


Changing Auto Industry 

t 

Inquiry by U.S. Coming at Time When 
4 Makers Can Cite Bids to Compete 



I By AI£XAI®ER R. HAMftffiR Unc|.an Se d™ S3Tp^ 0 o k 7t STaotomoMe safely aad ithe growtag ^TS^g oi 

I a iarger-tn an -expected • in- • industry in many years comes ne *s of the costs of moving | ne wly restructured Northeast- 

crease in the nation’s unem- at a time when around by car fostered Ralph ^ railroad system took only 

ployment rate sent stock prices the four major Nader ^ consumer move- two years) elected not to move 

down slightly in slower trad-' Economic producers are un- _ The questioning 07 from their homes, but to accept 

mg yesterday. ■. ■ R.YB.E. Index ssas ‘-olds Analysis dergoing the first P“^ of relocation allowances in the 

At the end of trading on the S.A P.Comp 103.79 — aos major re stru ctnr- poucres at a nnu al meet- form of commuting expenses. 

New York Stock Exchange, the- dow'Jwks I nd. gsaoo -a68 ' ing of their prod- in ? a D “- . ... . . Mr. Lewis, for example, was 

Dow Jones industrial -average \ I =fll uC ts and eolations Vincfe “j" deyemiments had to be paid $26,600 in Federal 

was* off 0.68 point to. 986, its • - TtaK«* York Times World War IL Except for peri- 2“X. * ™“ or mpa y funds for commuting and living 

high for the session. * T : odic economic downturn* the ^ ^ ense ^. in Washington rather 

' Prices -on the Big Board) Declines on the Big Board years since the war have been 2f v f S s ?^Sone of tiiemost bw borne In Con- 

S5& w TSSTJHSt sg* *** by COTpIa ' ^ a ^ FBjLS % zl iS 

,i .^89 since 7^ percent last January, dropped to 13.93 miHlonlSres old to salesmen who did not SSLtl^SiP b g DCOnsiaered taxable. 

1 .‘L^t^rfnrrd : -WaH. Street bad: generally from 15.53 million shares the sell but wrote up orders, the Jas^lnd of oSS? hS " I, ! Tr 

been antidpating some increase day before. industry concentrated on styl- fS^^xSmntS^risS Mark Up; Francs Off 

m:th * unemployment rate, but . Consolidated trading nation- mg., aad making the cars big- ^ pnees^. which had almost The West German mark 1 



Department to take the first standards on air quality ’ and^S^S & 

rn-depth look at the automobile safety and thegrowmg aWare- work designing the; 

industry in many years comes ness of the costs ot movmg newly restructured North east- 

1 nrmirtn hv mr Malnh 1 .. _ . . _ , 


R. YB.E. Index SSAS ‘-ao* 

S. A P.Comp 103.79 -0-06 
Daw'Joneslnd. 986LOO -0.68 

V 

TtaNsi* York Times 


Erie Kroll 

Nathan Sassover, president of TMX Inc, with the wire- 
less transmitter used to allow an automobile to be oper- 
ated. A patent has been granted on the device. 


at a time when abound by car fostered Ralph gjj, railroad system took only 
the four major Nader and the consumer mow- two years) elected not to move 
Economic producers are un- . V 1 ® questl0 !? in l from their homes, but to accept 
Analysis dergoing the first P ub “ c interest groups of cor- relocation allowances in the _ 

gygf Remote Security Device 

UCts and corporations sinefe ? ut ^ developments had to be paid $26,600 in Federal J 

World War IL Extept for peri- funds for co^u&g and living AiifAC To 

odic economic downturn* the JJ* ^ >ense ^. m Washington rather J? OF /illtOS IS LACVClOpGQ 

years since the war have been ^ faJJ . 9 1 1S J 3 > J °» “7 than selling his home in Con- ^ 


By STACY V. JONES 

SpsdaJ to Tie Tie* York Times 



PSf-fSranS [dS«- “ :th * unraiploym.ent rate, but . Consolidated trading nation- mg.. aad making the cars big- ^ ^ feufalmo* 

fW-dSESdsoh the the oze of the rae-appeared wide of stocks listed on the 8* and more expensive. Most doub 5ed ^ a decade, caused a 
-^Siffwas tosurpmsesome investors. 7- ifewYork exchange fell to 16^3 customp exc^tfor a small ^^^^1 shift in attitude. 

S' | Sa V and con- Also creating uncertainty million dmres from 18.02 mil- segment that tinned to nn- r Gerstenbere who 

L rates wo re amove, traders was the import lion shares on Thursday. ports, went along for the nde. ^ 0 fjj^at 

? ; Thursday that the nation’s re- Robert w Stovall, director of There were some changes for thflf h-. * hllt Hip Him 


Mark Up; Francs Off 

The West German mark 
edged upward against the 
dollar in Europe while the 
Belgian and French francs 
weakened. Gold prices rose 
but South African gold min- 
ing shares in London hit a 


no new 
^expected during 
Iquarier except the 

?s 'xdrtjne sales of 
absence 

! Government bond 
.money., piaraet 


Nationalized Ley land Sputters a Bit More Smoothly 



rof or v LONDON, .Aug. At II For six month 

^.anv iAiM- each day a report is even been ma 
I^W^SmSarv T^ced on the desk of Alexan- after a loss of 
-.Ser. Park, the 49-year-old last year on ^1 
-Yorkshireman who runs the 7 lion. And Mr. ] 
sprawling British automotive company wo 
^tge^ ^olnmh A colossus that makes Jaguars, -profitable for dj 
pgr j# ■ - ’lYiungjhs,' MG’s and Rovers. - month we're a 

|ggjfeT£-. ■ 7 .ft's not a ^financial • report pr o fi t ? we -mad 

Sl^n9flflt£9 that Mr. Paric gets. It’s a half” he said. 
^ffr luw " strike repdrt. •. ** Brittm’s entir 

iPenmeitft •! One day this week;, a typi- hationahxed. mi 
mllflKCHi^ cal .day for British Leyland to be changing 
* • • - . ■ • • ltd., Mr. Park learned that, -of troublesome 

■~-i V • ** there were 'seven strikes in fem, and Leyli 

„ . C. JENSEN progess at .the company’s^ • the first stroni 
S j&npanW rfflort- factories! They had bean' the new attitude 
sy- ■ that they- had cause d^jy 200 men, who in .) Fbrrears tixe 
enable or improper turn had fdrced 5,000 others, km of the men 1 
nr \od' ussuiriained qj Xeylassis labor foroe of ,, /gie Govhthdk 
tdsrldrtsseas. They isa,0fl0 to sdn>:work, \ .dustries bavecc 
rail Company, Dart jv, fha year since the British teriy rf their ini 


C JENSEN 
<»ppanW rflport- 


*y PETER T-B^lBORN . 

'• SpocfBltollluiVevTflctZlmei *’ 

B— At II Far six months Leyland has 
1 report is even been- making money, 
: of Alexan- after a- loss of $220 million 
49-year-old last year an kales of $3-3 faO- 
o .runs the 7 lion.. And Mr. Park said the 
automotive company would remain 
w Ja g uars,- -profitable for dll 1976- “Each 
hd Xovers. - month we’re adding to the 
cial> report profi t ^ we - made m the first 
jets;- Iifs a ' half” he said. 

v*; : Briiam's entire approach to 
w»v st typi- nationalized, industry seems 
5b .Leyland : to' be changing, after years 
mined that,-. of troublesome- experfmenta- 
strikes in tion, '-and Leyland could be 
ctHnpany’s - the first Strong 'example of 
had the newattittule. r 

hi, who in . ) FOr years, tire more butspo- 
,000 others km of the men who have run 
x foree af v ._the Govsiment-owned m- 
rorfc. ' . .dustries have comphuned bit- 



m 0 % -m % ^ $ - ■% 

l-.V'- l/L •' ;„v?- , 






WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 — A 
motor vehicle fitted with ra 
new security system cannot 
be operated until the owner 
reaches into a pocket or 
purse and presses a button 
on a wireless mi- 
' cro - transmitter 

*2Sr about the size of 
a cigarette light- 
weeK er. The coded 
electronic mes- 
sage releases the ignition 
and engine for full operation. 

The system, known as-TMX 
4,000, has been undergoing 
test marketing in the New 
York area, and its promoters 
plan a national sales cam- 
paign for the fall, including 
installations by new-car deal- 
ers . * 

Nathan Sassover, presi- 
dent of TMX Inc., of New 
York, and Mario Irizarry, a 
consultant to the company, 
have been notified that their 
patent' on the system has 


been allowed and will soon 
be issued. 

Pressure on the transmit- 
ter’s button either paralyzes 
the car’s electronic equip- 
ment or frees it for driving. 
An ultra high frequency re- 
ceiver hidden in the car car- 
ries out the commands. 

The system, for which ap- 
proval oy thp Federal Com- 
munications Commission is 
expected, can be deactivated. 
If the pocket transmitter is 
lost, another can be prepared 
by the insertion of a coded 
cartridge. 

The transmitter and receiv- 
er are operated by integrated 
circuits, each with more than 
3,000 electronic components. 
TMX, Inc 4 is the designer 
and producer. 

The company is also offer- 
ing a multifunction system 
that provides remote opera- 
tion for door locks and lights, 
arid give^ an alarm if equip- 
ment is tampered with. 

After tests, the Interna- 
tional Conference of Police 
Associations has endorsed 


F F r Knid fn f /iff tional Conference of Police 

Jtuu iu LiUg Associations has endorsed 

On Multimiiomh 

— According to one of the 

BRUSSELS, Aug: 6 — Euro- week’s patents, many unde- 


from testator* collapse; it " management responsibilities 


.. . i<Vto f— -- 

jus company, - a se^ that in some way&.aU 
rodueer and flte ^ Government's . bureau- 

£!SS2£ crets and ap- its resources 
had made $47ft000 ma^much of a dent 

nents between 1971 scri^.afe; st01:part ofthe 
■'Sent The company vjw of Bfe, and the 

J ffwasits^ pro- ' makes ' old- 

-sales, and $258,W)0 ■ ^oggi'icars in-old factories. 

^ : But the Writes -don't last 

.r invoicing prac- - ifYm» ac tiiev did a vear 


as settmg prices and laying 
workers off during business 
declines. ' - . - 

' SoraetimB last year the 
-Government found that such 
in te rv en tion bad become self- 


company stffl ' makes; old- defeating. Companies that 
model Hears mold factories. .couldn’traiaeprices to meet 


^ . m ^uesnon™' e . But: the ’strikes -don't last 
’ / :r invoicing ^ joiig as Jhey^ did' a, year 

v*.V' - . aco and now there are fewer 

.stnes, a drveretfi^ or Jhcns.' New- factories are 
“S' 7 (X ?5 S mani ^ C 2}o? . opening, paid for with money 
S th« Govern^ 

meat, and a few new-model 
subsidi^ t^. JB - caf g ^ ave begun to trickle 

y. n Page 26,Colmnn 4 outxrfthenu .;.' 


their costs or. Jay off work- . 
ers had to be subsidized. 

■ - That- 'aggravated the national 
itebt, Britain’s inflation and 
other ills tharh&ped depr^ffi 
the British, pound. 

These days, said Mr. Pari, 

Continued cnPags 27, column 4 



p^n multinational companies veloped __ nations are bathed 
ought to be developed “in order m sunshme for large portions 
to counterbalance multina- ™ each year but have diffi- 
tionals based outside the com- cully getting enough water 
munity.” a study commission ea to sustain their agncultmre. 
for the Common Market has A contractor for flie Na- 
conduded. - tional Aeronautics and Space 


ription systems in arid re- 
gions of the earth. 

Charles C. Kirsten of the 


culated privately show, that al- ™ 

though n»rly hij of the 10,000 

rigation systems in ari? re- 
the nm e-member community. _« ^ 

£ C ^ Charles C - of 

P* Jet Propulsion Laboratory, 

quarter of the lO.OW here have Pasaden £ ^ obtain ^ 

headquarters m the .United pa teDt 3.972,651 for the 

States - , space agencj’. Unconcentrat- 

Of the top 200 multinational sunlight serees as the 
companies, more than half are source of energy and atmos- 


Csreen Pre» 


Alexand er Park Is the chief at British Leyland, the automobile colossus that makes 
MG’s, Jaguars, Triumphs and Rovers. 


companies, more than half are source of energy and atmos- 
American based, and the 200 pheric afr serves as a work- 
had annual volume of SI.OOH i r e fluid for intennittently 
billion m 1973. About o,00p delivering a stream of water 
concerns, half those surveyed j rc . m arJ L\-ailab!e source, 
reported on their volume. fhe pump employs the 

Continued on Page 26, Column ^Continued on Page 27, Column 4 








THE NEW YORK TIME&, SA TURD A Y, A UGUST . 7, 1976 . - ■ 


STOCKS WEMEN 
ON JOBLESS DATA 


Highs said Lows 

Friday, August 6,1976 


Continued From Page 25 


investment policy of Reynolds 
Securities Inc., commented that 
the market was definitely -run- 
ning bn two cylinders. Institu- 
tional trading desk activity is 
light, he said, "while the public 
seems more interested in high- 
yielding bonds than stocks.” 

Mr. Stovall commented .that, 
with the Republican National 
Convention tittle more than a 
week away, “there seems no) 
urgency to launch major buy- 
ing or selling in stocks." - 

Price changes in most issues! 
1 yesterday were limited to frac- 
> lions of a point Only one stock 
In the Dow industrials changed 
as much as a point — Du Pont' 
which fell 1 to 135%. I 

The volume leader was Dow 
Chemical. It rose ft to 44J& on 
a turnover of 331,700 shares, 
including a block of 100,000 
shares at 44. 

Gulf Resources, the second 
most heavily traded issue, 
tumbled Ift to 15ft on 319,400 
shares. A cross transaction of 
244,900 shares (handled by 
Goldman Sachs) at 14% ac- 
counted for the bulk of activity. , 

One of the larger losers was 
Kerr-McKee, which fell 2% to 
72%. Some analysts have re- 
cently lowered their earning 
estimates far this natural- 
resources company because of 
concern over its uranium busi- 
ness. 

Another weaker issue was 
Sohio. It declined 1 to 71% 
after the company announced 
it bad increased the develop- 
ment costs for its Alaskan oil 
' venture, to $1.78 billion from 
$I.4.MJJon. One of its affiliates 
placed $500 million of long- 
term notes privately on Thurs- 
day for its work on the Alaskan 
pipeline. . 

Eastman Kodak eased % to 
94% after a court in London, 


Aetna LK p ( 
Amstad 
AHRcMId erl 
Balt GasS 
Barnes Cn> 
Boitfits 4pf 
Cm II I PSk 
OmfdiDfA 
ComeGJW 
Cawte Corn" 
Cult) Emi Pf 
Dow Jones 
DukePpfF 
GwStoraS 


HEW HIGHS— 
Harris Q> 
HooverB n 
Houston LP 
I miles Com 
instlCD p(A 
!nt MofflH . 
IntTBT pfO 
■ KansCfrPL 
KHfckrUt 
McKee Cd 
MldCont Tal 
Nicer toe 
Marine ri 



Otidook-for ^^Amd^lirComputers 


By ROBERT MEIZ 


ASA Ltd 
AlrProd 
Amrtp Com 
Caesar Worl 
CampTan 


NEW LOWES- W 
Dow Ch Rohm Haas . 

FederDSJr SwstBnWi 

Hoiplt Afffll Ward Foods • 

UsPSv pf WnUn 10.25W 

Morr Knud 


ruling in favor of Pdlaroid, 
temporarily prevented Kodak 
from manufacturing and selling 
its instant camera in Britain. 
Kodak said it would appeal the 
court’s decision. Polaroid fell 
ft to 39. 

Although Mo has co reported 
higher second-quarter and first- 
half earnings on Thursday, the 
stock fell % to 17. Analysts 
noted that some traders were 
disappointed with the size of 
the earnings gain. - 

Overseas Shiphokling was off 
% to 16% after the company 
reported that its earnings' in 
the' second quarter slipped to 
$1.02 a share from $1.26 a 
share. 

National Distillers & Chemii 
cal, which recently announced 
a 55 percent -rise in second- 
quarter earnings, advanced % 
to 26%. 

The best gainer yesterday 
was skelly OU, which rose;2 
to 112 after a 1%-point game 
on Thursday. Earlier this week 
Skelly signed a long-term con- 
tract to supply uranium oxide 
for the Alabama Power Com- 
pany. 

A drop In the second-quarter 
profit at MacAndrews & Forbes 
to 2 cents a share from the 
year-earlier 32 cents a share 
sent the company’s stock down 
ft to 8%. 

Stocks losing 2 points or 
more included Hewlett-Packard, 
Digital Equipment and Getty 
Oil. 


Continued From Page 25 


V TJ fl rAUflEDUO links inside the developing 

ijiUiUi uUriUJlfiriu world, followed by the Ameri- 

_ _ _ can corporations, the French 

ARE HELD LAGGING "« 2 s SMS. - 

the extensive links in the devel- 
oping countries by these con- 
continued From Page 25 cems, the considerable weight 

,, ; — ~ • . some have in their home coun- 

Among these, the 1,200 Amen- jjy as well, 
can concerns reporting 1973 For instance the Netherlands, 
turcover had a total .^5900 ! a gmaji country that has never- 
bil lion, had f again the S600 bil- 1 theless spawned several large 
iion volume reported by <.,500 multinational concerns, finds 
European companies. that six industrial companies 

The study defined a multina- have a turnover equal to 68.8 
tional corporation as any com- percent of the nation’s gross 
pany that had at least one im- national product, 
portant unit in a foreign coun- The figure is 52 percent for 
tty. It did not count sales out- the share of British multina- 
lets as constituting such a mul- tionals’ industrial output, "45 
tinational reach. percent for Japan. 41 percent 

But after discarding the com- for the Unitd States arid'27.per- 
panies with only one foreign cent for West Germany, 
subsidiary, it found that 5,862 south Africa, which a this 


remained as more truly interna- study is classified as a develop- 
tionai in character. Of this lafc- ine countrv. has more mufti- 


uonai in cnaracrer. or tms ia.tr ing country, has more, multi- 
ter type, the United States was national concerns with"'bpera- 
the home base : for 27.1 percent, dons within its borders than 
with. Britain,.. West Germany, any other third world- countries 
Switzerland - .arm France as the followed by Brazil, ' Mexico, 
next leading bases of opera- Argentina, India, Singapore, 
a™—!— _ . . . Malaysia and Venezuela as the 

American concerns had far next most frequent host coun- 
more employees than others — tries. r 

19.5 million, compared with The survey, undertaken over 


nearly eight million reported by an ls-month period by. the Eu- 
Bntish companies. Those re- ropean Economic Community 


enusn companies, i nose re- ropean Economic Community 
porting on employment had a to help it formulate policy, ob- 
total of 46 million workers on serves that “it is false that most 

“’Elf ^ a ^ rr ? . ; multinationals are gigantic in 

The British also had more size.” 


Business Briefs 


The Amdahl Corporation, 
one of scores of would-be 
Davids fo. the LB.M. -Goliath, 
was tohave offered 1,065,000 
comiiuoo shares to tfc^pubuhr 
this '-week, but a last-minute 
roadblock the Securities 
and Exchange -C ommis sion 
delayed the .marketing- 
>■ The Amdahl' shared have 
now cleared . the hurdle^-a 
question raised on the ac- 
counting treatment erf an Am- 
dahl computer sold -ip Can- 
ada last mewathr-and ■ the . 'Of- 
fering is expected > next 
Thursday. The.- First. Boston. 
Corop ration, top managing: 
underwriter^ - apparen tly ■ still' 
plans -to offer the. shares, at 
$30. • V. : 

Amdahl fnay - be -unique, 
among- the . International. 
Basin ess Machines 

Corporation’s . legion of tiny 
competitors. Most of them 
offer computer peripheral 
equipment, ' but Amdahl 
offers .a giant main-frame 
computer directly competi- 
tive with IBM’s prime prod- 
uct 

-. This is no coincidence. To 
quote from the stock 
offering's prospectus: 

“Dr. Gene M. Amdahl, who 
founded, the company in 
1970,' is ' an internationally, 
recognized computer archi- 
tect who, prior to forming 
the company, had worked for 
LB.M. for over 13 years. 

“Dr. Amdahl had the design 
and engineering responsibil- 
ity for the LBJVL Model 704, 
had the initial design respon- 
sibility for LB .M. Models 709 
and 7030 and managed the 
architectural planning of the 
LB.MJ System 360.” ' 

. Amdahl’s own model 
470V/6 competes with 
LB.M.'s top-of-th e-line 370 
computers. Amdahl's com- 
puters are designed to use 
IBM. software, which Am- 
dahl does not produce. 

Amdahl does produce .one 
form of software — system 
maintenance . control pro- 
grams — and has developed 
other software programs for 
use in its own engineering 
and product development. 
.The ‘company obtains from 
LB.M., and modifies for its 
use. operating system pro- 
gram software. Amdahl- ex- 
'p.ects its customers to obtain 
applications ’software from 
. LJ3.M. and other suppliers. 

• So far the Springfield, 
Mass!, concern has installed 
15 of its computers— five of 
them still in the testing 
stage. Deeply in debt, Am- 
dahl cannot afford to offer 
its 1 computers-’ on'.. la -'-lease, 
basis.— • 

Amdahl’s sajes-of-$14.4 mil- 
lion- m 1976 were one- tenth' 
of I- percent of those'of 
L3.MJL $14.4 billion. In a 
recent negative comment ’on 
Amdahl’s long-term ' pros- 
pects, Martin Simpson & 
Company, a Wall Street brok- 
erage house, was neverthe- 
less impressed with the com- 
pany’s product. Th4 report by 
Martin Simpson said in part: 

“Generally, end-users of the 
Amdahl computers are posi- 
tive, having installed the Sys- 
tran primarily as a cost effec- 
tive replacement that is plug- 
compatible with the I.B.M. 
370/168. 


“However, there have been 
some technical problems with 
the Nova minicomputer used 
in the console, most of which 
seem, to have' been- resolved. 

- Customers especially like the 

- compact -ccmtiguration of the 
. 470/V6 and. the' fact, that 'it 

is air-cooled (rather:' than 
liquid cooled, as is the IBM 


370/168)”.' 1 

.Martin .Simpson is not part 
: of , the Amdahl underwriting. 

* 'group.' The negative factors, 

. ■ as Martin Simpson sees them*.- 
< are' weak finances, vulnera- 
. bility to IBM technology and 
,. * tiie relative^ high price ex- 
pected for the shares on pub- 
lic .offering..-, *'.■ 

The Martin Simpson report 
notes that it Is “Ufeely^* that 
LBM. will be introducing its 
next generation ttf large com- 
puter systems within -two to 
three years* and-' "there is a 
strong possibility’’ that the 
- operating software system for' 
these new machines will Be 
embedded m the hardware 
! throu gh the use of micro- 
coding or dedicated micro- 
computers. If LBML did that, , 
. and the technology for this 
is available, it would no long- 
er be possible for an outsider 
to use the LBM. operating 
system since the coding 
would be known only to LB.M. 

On the other, hand, it is 
probably fair to say that com- 
puters such as IJUIfL’s 370/ 
168 and Amdahlls 470 V/6 will 
continue to be more than 
adequate for. the bulk of com- 
. puter users for many years 
to come.' The simplest com- 
puter of all — the abacus — is 
still in wide use. 

In a transportation anal- 
ogy, the Volkswagen Beetle 
still serves millions of motor- 
ists, although the design has 
remained' essentially un- 
changed from its development 
in the early 1930’s. 

More critical to Amdahl’s 
sucess, perhaps, is the 
company's accumulated de- 
ficit since 1970 of $41.2 mil- 
lion and negative working 
capital of $5.2 million. Am- 
‘dahl is expected to break into 
the black for the full year 
of 1976. The company earned 
$3.1 million in this year’s 
first half and may earn S5 
million in the second half as 
Martin Simpson expects. 
That s $1.10 a share. At the 
anticipated offering price of 
$30 a share, that works out 
to a lofty price/earnings ra- 
tio of 27. 

If the financing is complet- 
...ed without , a hitch, Fujisu 
Ltd. of Japan will increase 

• its ownership of Amdahl to 
. about . 30 percent from the 

present 19.5 percent West 
■ ' Germany's Nixdorf Computer 
5 . would hold 5 percent, down 
from 18 percent because of 
the rise in capitalization. The 
Heizer Corporation, a Chica- 
go venture-capital company 
that put up the initial financ- 


ing, would receive 25 percent 
of the equity interest through 
the conversion of debt and 
preferred stock into common. 

Dr. Amdahl, who is now 
chariman, would retain 1.8 
percent of the stock and his 
relatives and children, would 
own 3.3 percent He is" selling 
33,000 of the shares to be 
offered. At $30 a share, this 
would net him $990,000. 


Alpohol Envisioned as Source of Fuel 

WASHINGTON, .Aug. 6 (UPI)— Alcohol may some day 
become a valuable fuel to help solve United States energy 
problems but production costs must first be greatly reduced, 
the oil industry said today. A new report 1 by an American 
Petroleum 'Institute task force said. the best use of alcohol 
as a future replacement for conventional fuel might be "in 
powering ‘stationary, gas turbines. Alcohol might also be 
used as a substitute for gasoline in cans, it said. 

Although the A J.L report appeared to soften industry 
resistance to the idea of using such types of alcohol as 
ethanol and methanol as supplementary fuels,- it offered 
little hope alcohol ean supply much energy in the near 
future. “Pronouncements that alcohol can currently be 
used as a significant supplement to domestic oil and gas 
supplies are unrealistic, since alcohols are considerably 
more expensive to produce than petroluem fuels,’’ said J. 
H. Freeman of the Sun Oil Company, head of. the task force. 



IRREGULAR ... 


Consol CipRtty 

.. .1684 

8-17 


IIT1TIAL ... . 


ACF ImJusf n 

.. AS 

via 

Fanners Group 

n .. .10 

620 

Galveston Hans 

n- .05 . 

9-10 


RESUMED 

Inspiration Consol JZ5 Ml Hi 

__ INCREASED 

POro Briarsrlns *. J7 M 9-1 5 

Wish WiterPow* „ J2 . . 8-23 9-13 
Zalo Com JQ 9-21 10-29 


REGULAR 


Japan Shipbuilding Cut Seen 

TOKYO, Aug. 6 (Reuters) — Japan’s shipbuilding indus- 
try, the largest in the world, is expected to severely reduce 
production to cope with a continuing slump in world de- 
mand for ships. The Transport Ministry said today it would 
instruct 40- major shipbuilders to curtail their operating 
rate from next October to around 65 per cent of the level 
of 1974, when shipyards were still working-on pre-oil crisis 
orders. 


DONALDSON REPORTS 


Brooks Scanlon 

a 

.175 

B-2S 

Buffalo Faroe 

0 

JO 

9-16 

Canada Cement 

0 

.15 

8-U 

Cote Halt 

Q 

.15 

8-20 

Colonial LMAcc 

Q 

J7 

10-28 

Own Ud 

Q 

.06 

8-18 • 

Drewl BdDebFd 

M 

.12 

8-20 

Eagle Plcher 

Q 

-29 

8-20 

El Paso Co 

Q 

375 

8-27 

Farnmrs NewWrM 

Q 

-05 

8-20 

Mtaral Slenal 

Q 

.75 

t-20 

Florida Steel 

Q 

■375 

Ml 

Harbor ■ Fund 


.12 

8-6 

Hattens Inom 

U 

.12- 

8-13 

Houston OIIAM 

Q 

JB 

8-20 

Hutton EFGrft 

Q 

.15 

8-16 

Johns MaovUle 

Q 

35 

*26 

Monarch lirnst 
Hltiwst Energy r 
Rockwell Inti 

§ 

•Q 

MS 

JO 

JO 

9-16 

8-20 

.8-18 

Setwar Food 

Q 

.125 

8-20 

Scott OFetzer 

O 

JO 

8-17 

r SI oild ns Indutf 

O 

.15 

9-13 

Sterling Dm 

-a 

J75 

8-17 

SuMrfor Indus 

Q 

M 

8-ZO 

TatoCoo Coro 

. „ 

Jft 

9-15 

US TrustHY 

O 

AS 

104 


fFyoo hem a diversified portfolio, or are looking for on A n nu lm en t vs- 


it’s Imp or tan t to know the noxns behind a particular itock'iec- 
nora, to prevent an unnecessary sale or an unwa r ra n ted buy. - 


nans, to prevent an unnecessary sale or an unwa r ra n ted buy. - 
Donaldson pubCdies a wapidy report, an ten widely held stocks which 
are showing unusual market octmttr^cm_positnnB and live negative. 
These sfocfts'are identi fi ed through their independent action of normal 
market forca. 

Our research staff Investigates these s i tua tio ns unrig, who services, bro- 
kerage reports, corporation news releases, etc., to discover the reasons 
behind their movement. 

This information is then relayed to aw* sub sc ribers in our ten pogt eoat- 
preheniive rep^,ma^ ot the cfose of business Friday.- 
Donaldson Reports cover only the 1,200 largest corporations, many 
with underlying options, hi the period April IS to June IS, we made in 
depth reports on over 80 sfoda mduding the following: 


i 15 - 30 %+ reteni os 


Tta Ostia* Writer Campunr. n*potl 
eOadm •mu'-awf vuUs ui if CBOL 
ASEennU Etch long-nm ease** nW 
rows Mmam 
brant. 


thwSt caraiAm if fern nth neon* 


Abbott Lab 
Aetna U 
MBs Clial 
Am Airiln 
Am Home 
Am Motors 
Avon 

Beatrice Fd 
Black Deck 
Bran ill ' 
CBS 

Chase M. 


Citicorp. 

Constat . 

Dennys 

Disney 

Dresser 

East Air 

Elhylcorp 

Fed Natl Mlg 

Firestone 

Flour Cp. 

Fuqua 

QHIetle. 


Goodyear • 
Greyhound 
GuffS West 
Holiday Inn 
Honeywell 
Inexca Oil 
Int Mining 
Kerr McGee 
Kresge . 
Uvttz 
Litton 
LevSieg. 


LTV • 

Mar cor , 
Massey For 
Mead 
Nat. DmL 
NCR ■ 

Nwst Air 
Nwstlnd 
; 0lin Cp - 
Pari Am 
Pennzoil 
QuakOat ' ■ 


RCA , 

Revlon 

Ryder Sys. 

Signal Cos- 

Skaggs 

Sony 

Tandy 

Tenneco 

TWA 

UAL 

US Home 
Westinghouse 


BBfK Btaml ma W4<pW*/pMchMr 

pn»o«ingBf( Tm nWtm eoesund 

brticti Boitar (II ishiw ih* man s 
PM MfOMft'R) «m«Mt At CDUM It 
■motel thoauftcraWau boVi v'tiQt. 
» iS%oaMi« rpnfontiuunon.OW 
Mr it It/S mart nmW 117 


■ OwCR if hi bdoMnwWt tool tot ' 

splUn-wlnn noting nmuarani nW*. . 

Fnlrr, lint elns, butt on 

Dron in' t dott St«d SiO to* • *- 
out W ptfotW* 


nmf . ■ •’ 

(Unit 


I Attnui 


To try our service, just pay for the number of reports you wish id receive 
(min. 12 weeks) at 7S cents per report. r 


Ov 


Sum .i 7a 


Bock issues on the above stocks- are available at 25 cents per copy to 
subscr&ers, specify stocks when moifing for subscription to: Dancdiban 
KspartSf 407 West 74fh Terrace, Kansas City, Missouri 
64114. 


Opw Cmpow Ptptn WWOti, 
flitAfbeta, Un -I oomI Caranitw CoiS> 

1 17 PaCU Aw . J«tt| 0*r N J. 9>3P£ - 


Ta dHtotUf- IW Atvgmtft 


American Dwl . . «V BJ4 — T 

Gemini Capital- .. . T«4 21 JB -3 

rtetniistere . ... 1JS +1 

inome S Cap. 6% 9-t7 —3 

Lmmr Fund of Bust. 701k 7 -3 

Pwasus Inc. 9'A 9 : 

Putnam Duofond ... Mi 9J9 —a 

Scudder Don Vest . . 10%1 -3 

Scuditer Dim Exer. 20 31.10 -—3 

Prices by Llrw Analytical Distributers. 

KA-Nci available. 


- — . . Stock M^rkefclndicators 

(The tabled the most adive tra&w. oerantw chews. 

Hsted on me ttew Yirt Slock Exchange and the American Stock Esdirogc. The msrkel averages, however, are based » me « ^ 


N:Y.SB Index - 


SfiPMex 


Index 
industrial 
Transpor t 
UttIHv . 
Finance. . 


- Htgb'tetir ~List cho 

— JiUS 55J2 sstoi-iLM 


— A152 67^0 fiya -OJW 
...AU3 41Z3 41ttT -004 
... 31 A 37J* HIM . +0.18 
SU3-SA3V -0,17 


HUT.. Luw.. Chit Chflt 
seOEsbatrlals U4.71 Ilf M IMS -•» 

ffSffial SS 1L» 
sSSSS:" T0f2?i«.!0i?u8 *4* 


Consolidated Trading 

I : t :' 

- 1 N.Y.S^. iMies f 




,panges 


MbstActi 


Up-Down Volume 


Amex Index. 


. Advanced. Downed 
NY5E MSUMshares 5,7SMBM»ns 
amex , sbjnonmet res 


, NASDA^Mex.' 


Odd LotTradiiig 


-. Purchases of I2M17 wares: safes at- 
27U43- shares inrtucflnaTa sberei.eulq 
short. ; ^ . > 


f Index • ■ Ctet 
Coraoosfle via* 
Indus# 055T 
,Rnand. . 9190 
•. Insurance os sr 
utilities ma 
^Banks -8US. 
Transport ma 


Wcrit Mortft ^ 

■ : choI--' Asm . a» 

♦ 9U9. .1W 

+ 0.13 9SM MJt' 
+ 017 97J6 91A 

+ 053 SSAB SOM . 

75.13 . 7321. 
-OZ1 UM . 

+ o» 10078 mm 


1 DuSmQt ^fc 

4 AtatwkDet *4 ■‘f- 
, 5 SvstjwDon m 

A CdznSoRTtv » Wi 
■ T ConnllRHy + W 
8 . PlavtwEB 3W > J* 
9- Groifcrtnc v -W W 
•'» AefauLTtof - 46- **+ 

J l» Avislnc V * 

,12 Katytod ' — 4% ' *- * 

.U UrfonCorp 

.74 QenevCn :--Wh- * 

15 FStjVUs«CJ»;.' « * W 


• per. 

tip 1X3 
UP..TZ5 


'g.’S 


DO. t.1 

UP : H 
up xr 

up 7.7 

up... 7.1 

Up ■ 7J0 
U> . 09 
UP'15.9 




Up SA 
UP SA 


DowOt..... 

Guttmarc : 

IHevertor... 

: DtewfW......:~. 

Texaco! nc 

MGianv 

EestKodek.^..^. 

CaruPwU........ 

- Exxon.,......::.. 

Gerrtfotors...;-: 
AmTti&Tet. 

* AvTsInc... 
Am5t8nd.w.... — , 

• Triedync 

Chrysler 




f. 'C-.- 


30 hxbstrfeis 

tSS Transoart ...™^ 
15-Uttnfies ....^. 
45 Slocks 


opa Hob -Lb* Close Cha 
— Si&fll 989 m.19 «MO-tO». 
—2245 7039 -221.67 22Z52* - tUJ. 

VU0 93.91 92Mi -9SJSS + 048 . 

-jXBJn 3UJ3 307217 30947 - O01 


DOWNS 


Netne ■ Lest Ow 
t . CL Assets Vk » _ 10 

2 CactasMta • Vb - » 

3 UMETTf -' •- W 


Consofidaled 'Trading^. 
Arjlex IsSues.k ' 
Most Active 


O.T.C Most’ Active 

. Name VoUtidsl Bid ,.'Ai*id Ow- 


rtamc 

SvntexCorp 

Fiesstettz.-^ 

statMLQwd 

PresfeyCo 

CernDMpfA 

-BroscanA 

Semteclt.r — 

Kaiser ind 

inttenknot....... 

Varoinc......... 


• <- Net: 

Mot . Last Cbn. 

. ‘tJATtn 2 nwa' 

- 6 moo T4wr--*fc 
42JXW 5Vr..... 
39^00 12W+1 

- 3R600 » - W. 
•31600 1«4+ Vi 

■ 31300 «- Vk 

31A0B 155fc+ V* 

24,800 -ZVl 

2&500 n - Vk 


Mcnivn. — 
pmtoffl.. 
Mattm... • 
Amlfcor.r. 
Tornome.. 
QnraS.:... 
HVBttCo.— . 
Ang)aSA..w 


- 1274B0- 3Mh 39»- 
117JD0 ZMi » 
1114U0 33% 34VS 

- MOO H VPA 
S5MO 23M.24S4 

.ttOOQ m 2* 

am 3 as: asw. 

■s&m 22 »* xat 

- «as « '7Vk 

48M0 ■ 2m 


,2 CouslasMtq -Wi - » 

■ 3 UMETIV-" 1W . - W 
. 4 Caprertof.m - w 

■ -5 -ACentMtO-. JW r. * 
A-’GeanWMo Th - W 

. 7 WcrtlMrw- .- 4 Vi - 9k 
•S BamctB -m - W 

a.GalTResrc 3fl4 '-.HI 

10' ■ QltMtoRltV TVfc ~ Vo 

11 Amtnvest-- 3 U t;* 

12 .OMtpGp 415-76 -106 

13 FstPeMto 1ft - > 
U HatnnCft -Wr r ft 
15 LTVCpAA Wit. - IW 


. 4 Vr - 9k 
m - ft 
Uft '- 1ft 
Tft - -ft 
3ft -ft 


•Pet. - 

,otr. as 

Off 1X5 

otr mo 
Off v.i 
Off 7.7 
Off 7.7 
Off 13 

. on *1 

on "4.9 
Off 6.7 
Off « 
Off . 63 
Off 63 
Off- -A3 
Off 6.1' 


Marke 
- Diaucy 




Advances 

Declines. 

- Unchanged 
Totellssoes 
Nevfl976Mghs 
Newt976tcMa 


. .. • 


- v 

. s i 


• Volume 

. ; - .by - 

Exchanges . 


Dollar 

Leads. 


O.T.C. Market Diary 


Market Diary 






. 303 




Declined i..~ 

OSS ' 


242 

- 246 

Undtonged — <«-•». — -. 

1,919.. 


286 

. 334 . 

TotalhaceSi. . 

' 2*575 . 


• 301 

306 

NewWglH - 



832 

886 

Newfows .,.:.»..u.M . 

-30 : 

NewTVTfiMghS 

11 

9 

Totolsate — • . 


Newl9761aws 

5 





•NYSE 

Pacific 

Midwest — ......... 

h asp 

■ Boston .-..i......... 

■ l*Tnri *■ 

Ptrila.... 

. outer 

.Total .\ 


13,930080 

492.100 

.ii.- 397,400 

S2S&20 

.1S9.7DQ' 

.'109,400 

.i UMB 

. ...... .XM00 

.m5Z7^M 


Name . Tic 
DowCh... ...... 

i -EasSCd 

■IBM-... 

GnMot 

Tetodn. 

Disney.......... 

AmT&T 

.Wevarftr...^... 

' Exxon 

McOidd.. 

IntPafW.. 


iv.. >? '.S;? 

.’• ravr jr.rT’.jofc 


Sears • 

XenwQj.. • 


.Y.S.E. Is 


; I.,; - 

■ ii* 

• ' 


7976 Sfocks and Div. Sales NeT 

High Low in Dollars P/E 100's High Low Last Cl® - 


FRIDAY, AUGUST 6,7978 


. A— B^-G -4> 

36ft 32ft ACF lndl.80 I 11 W Mh-Mh- 
4 lft AJ Indostris S 10 SI W £*~ 


Day's . ' yoartoDate— 

Sate Ttnirsdav YetrAgs - 1976 1975 

limO00 75rf*MXI0 77^60X00 3 j« 4,1S44W. X161 .221 JXk 


1976 Stocks and Dtv. Sate " 
"High Law In Dotlart P/E IBTvH 


tStw* 




-7ft'' 6ft BurINo pLSS .. 34. 7 
TSIft -BSftJBurrtfis 48 23 475 95 


24ft TBft AMF Inc 1.24 U M2 20ft » 20 - ft 

17ft 72U APLCorp 7 5 24 Uft ]W 1»+ % 


60ft iift ARASv 7.06 15 • 38 Sft SZft S3U+ ft 

33 17ft ASALtd JO .. 513 T7ft .17 77ft- ft 

lift 7ft ATOInc 33 5 5 7 Bft 7ft ,7ft- 


33 

17V, ASALW JO 


lift 

7ft ATOInc 33 

5 

48ft 

37ft AbbtLatJ J8 16 

1BU 

S’-a AcmeCIv JO 12 

4«- 

2% AdmOo .0* 

6 

12Mr 

9?i AdmEx -91e 


5>4 

4 Adms WilUs- 

9 

13‘.6 

Addressog 

9 


m 


Th 2T# 


32ft 22ft AetnaLf 1.00 74 737 31ft 30ft 37 Vi...... 


45 36'i AetneLf pt 2 

9ft 4ft Aguirre Co 3 
Uft 9ft Ah mans 22 6 
■ft 2ft Alleen Inc 27 


1 46 46 46 +1 

2 ro 8ft flft 

K 13ft 13 13Vi+ Vb 

■ 3ft 3ft Vk 


J. *L * - * 


39ft 37 AlrProd JO 17 122 ST 36=1 3W*- ft 


U.-j It Airtm F 


12 72ft 12ft 12U- It 


- 67 46ft CBS 146 12 345 5? 
.41 - 33 CBS Of 1 .. 7 4* 

» •Tft ca com 9 7 

2ft 15-16 CIMtg GO .. 9 75- 

V& 2ft ClR3t Im/i „ 47 3 

35ft 28ft OTFln 2J0 7 92 34 
1ft ft CL Assets * 

7 4V, CL ASSt iffUfk ... X 5 

« ’ 3ft CCCAm ■ J4 6 'V~f 

-16ft- * CMlInv Cp .. 35 U 

8ft Sft CNAFM -7 HO 4= 

14- 11 CNA pfAI.18 .. 16 13 

-■ 72U 11 CNAI 1.08a ;. -6-73 

4m 4BftCPOnt 2J3* 10 . 2W 41 
26ft 14ft CTSCP - 48 9 5 22 

• 4V, 2- CabCab FW; - W 2 
29ft 18ft CatxrfC 1J8 * Z4 V 
5ft 2ft Cadence Ind .. 25 S 

. 5ft 3ft Caesars Wrt IS 24 I 

6ft 3 Cal Fkiani 8 19 t 


•.s 3 




3«ft 17ft Air cot nc 7 8 719 34 3Ji Sft...... 

2514 77 Akzona TJO W 9 18-.1 lBft 18ft+ ’+ 


ISVi I3Vt AlaGas l.a 8 
111 704ft AlaPw of 11 .. 

tn 78 AiaP pr B.i6 .. 
,91ft 77ft AlaP Df 8JB .. 


4 14ft 74ft 14ft + ft 
Z400 108ft 108 108ft + ft 

Z500 85 32ft 85 _.... 
1300 83 83 83 -1 


17V, 15U Cal PUt 146 30 


17ft 10ft Callaftn Mr 19 45 V 


.Yiva /rw Mur mi ,ri. ,, 

17ft lift Alaskln JOe 7 85 15ft Mft 15V«+ ft 
21ft W Attwnvln JO 11 -9 1 19ft 1P»+ ft 


8ft 5ti AJbertoC J6 76 
23ft 17ft AJbertsn .72 9 


3 7ft 7 7Vi+ .U 
7 21ft 31ft 21ft...... 


30ft 19ft AlcanAlu 40 V> 283 28ft 27?i> 2Sft+ ft 
lBft T4V* AlCOStd .72 6 13 17V» 17 17 


9ft 5ft Alexdrs .36e 5 

lift 7ft AllegCp .15e 33 

*$U 26 ft Altgtud 1 JO 7 

45ft 33<fl AllgLud pf 3 .. 


4 6 6 6 

5 11ft 71% lift 

38ft 38 38 - ft 

5 42ft 42 42 - ft 


NEW YORK- 
STOCK EXCHANGE 
COMPOSITE INDEX 

*• “HIGH 

. — — CLOSING 
LOW 


3ft 1ft Camm Bm .. 
27ft 18ft CmoRL .60a 15 
35lb 29ft CamSO 1J6 11 


-.-A-V 

- 


30ft 29ft CtmpTag 1.12 10 KM 3 


\90 25ft ConSoRwv • - 
19ft 13 CdnPac .86e 8 
12ft 7ft Canal R M T 
55'ft 42ft CapOtls JO 13 


T- . .-isSfcfi 


24ft 17ft-CapHold AO 12 228 


20 16ft AUgPw 1.60 7 lg Wi 19ft 19%+ ft 
'20 9ft AJIenGTO JO 9 » 16ft 16 16ft+ % 


3 - ft Caen Mtg .. 

35ft 30ft Car bar .90 9 
4ft 2ft -Carling OKe .. 
Mft. 70ft Carlisle .88 > 
7 5ft CaroFrp •» - 



21% 17ft CaroPw 1.72 8 1285 


44ft. 33ft AlldCh 1J0. 9 172 4Wfc 40 . fgA...... 

13ft 9ft AlldMnt Ml S 12ft 12% 12ft- . % 


15ft 10ft Al Id Prod JO 


59% 44ii AlldStr 1.80 6 16 44ft 44% 44;*- 14 


2% AIM Supmkt 


40 S'* S 1 h 5'A+ ft 


26ft 11% AlllSChal .60 7 119 25ft W4 Hft- ¥> . 
9ft 6ft AilrtAut .60 9 4 9ft : 9% 9*...... 


^NEW YORK- 
STOCK EXCHANGE 
VOLUME • 


10ft «•, AlohflP Ind 13 28 10ft 10ft 10ft- ft. 

58 38% Alcoa 1.40 27 400 57V. 56% 57J4+ £ 

41ft 33ft AmalSuo 3a 3 2 36% Mft 34ft- ft . 


60% 47 Amax 1.75 tt’ 91 53ft 53% 53ft +■ 




58ft 52% Amax BfB 3 .. 39 54% 54 5J - . A 

22ft llft-AMBAC JO 8 21 21ft 21 21 - % 

21ft 16% Amerce 1JQ 7 5 19ft 19ft 1«4 


3T/t 29ft Amrc at 2J0 


24ft 16ft AHesa job t 774 22ft 22 


3 Wr 34 ft 34ft 


59% 45ft AHes Of 3 JO 


43 Sft 54ft 54ft- ft 


21% 13% AAlrFllt- ^8 9 84 16ft 16ft 16ft + ft 
16ft Bft Am Airiln 20 342 15%. 15ft 15%..;... 


9 4% Amard J4 7 27 8% 8% 8ft+ ft 

15ft lift Am Baker ] 4 . 13 13ft 13ft Uft+ ft 


43ft' 38% ABmdS ZW 8 40 40ft 40ft 40ft+ ft 


21 ABrnd nfl .70 . 9 24ft 24ft 34ft+; ft 


39ft 19ft AmBdcsJ JO 31 562 3Sft 34ft 35% 

12% ' 9ft AmBldM AO 7 3 10ft 10% 10%......- 


rwiiimiiBrBiKtiHiwi 

(iimimnnimHiituhiiiHHaHGiia 

liiiitJiiiiiniiiiRiiHimiimmRiHiiirEb 

li«IIIIIIlIIIIII!IHIlll|II!l|lllfiriEIIlI!E!l!l| 

lllllllllGllllllllHIIIlillllfillllllllllllillllll 

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiifliiSiii!inii«miiifiiiiiViini| 

iiiiiiiiniiiiiiii»iiiiimiiiiuimmi]iiiiil 

iiiiiiniiiiiiiiiviiiimiiitiiiiiiiiiimmi 

II8IIII(IIiHIIIll=3lllflilllllIIIIII«III!IIIIIf^ 


36ft 30ft Amcan 2JD 7 774 35ft 35ft 35ft..-.- JUNE ■ JULY * l 


Oft 21 ACan pf 1J5 .. 
3 tft AmCen Mtg - 


4 23 '22% 23 + % 
2 1ft 1ft 1ft- ft 


AUG. , 


16ft 12ft Am CmfltJbe .. 99 lrft 14ft 14ft- V* 
•28ft Ofn AC van IJ0 9 416 26ft 26% Jft...... 


Dividend s MORE COMPANIES 
“ KEP 0 STPA 1 MENTS 


10ft 7% Am Distill .. 
-28Vj 19% ADIstTet .64 11 
7V, 4% AmtKMlVt .. 
13»/t »12ft ADul Df .84a .. 


18. 9ft 9ft 9ft- ft 
53 23% 23ft 23%+ ft 
17 6ft 6ft 6ft+ % 
5 13ft 13ft 13ft+ ft 


ZW* . 20ft JAmEIPw. 2 9 366.22ft 7ZV* 22ft +-' -ft 
15 10 AFemlly .28 7 53 12ft 12 12 


•',- - V 


29ft 26ft CerP WtlSt .. 13 

34i« jtft camte r^o * s 
18ft 11% CarrCo St 21 247 
16ft 12ft CarrGn J9e .. S- 
2S>4 17ft CadHaw .90* 9 64 

42ft 33 CartHw D( 2 .. 1ft : 
Bft -6% CBrtWall JO 94 27 

11 8ft.C3KNG .71 4 20 
17ft 15% CasJICk JOb 7 • 52 
62% 68ft CeterpTr IJft'.W 207 
. 19ft, 14 CecaCp 1.1S 7 6 

58 42ft Catanse 2J0 8 27 

52 46% Can p(A4.5D .. 1 

. 14 . 7ft Centex .12 14 229 

'18ft 13% CenSoW 1J0 9 la 
19ft 17ft CeriHud 1.7Z 7 77 

■ TBft 15ft CenlllLI 1,3 10 115 
29% 25% CnlLt pf2.62 .. Z180 r 
Mli "12ft Coil IPS U8 8. IDS 
22ft 18 CenUE -lJO 7 285 
15ft 14 CeMPw U4 9 89 
18 13ft CenSova .60 7 105 
23ft 19% CenTei 1 J6 10 36 

35ft 19% CentrDet JO 18 274 
22% 15 Cert-teed JS. 10 .15. 
29% 21ft CessnAir lb 10 S ; 
28ft 18 Ctwmplnt 1 9 114 ' 
65ft 55 aunt ptSJO .. ZTOQ ■ 
28ft 18ft. CtimlrPfl JO .. 43. 

13ft 11 ■ OiamSo J4 9 89 
5% 3ft ClurtrCo .08 17 140 . 
. : 26% 21ft Chartr NY 2 6 27 

8ft 7 CbaseFd JO.. - 9 




• - 




im 

i. - v» u 


,rf - - 




32%. 26ft CheaeM 220 12 260 


6ft 2% Am Fin Sys 
24% 22ft AGIBd 1.96e 
17% IS . AGenCv 1^2 


15 2ft 2ft 2ft 

. 10 24% ,24ft 24ft 

9 16% -I6%'16%- ft 


16% 12ft AGnlRS JB 8'»19 Mft"16ft 16% - ft 


M% 21% A Glitof 1.80 


11 24% 24ft 24ft- ft 


Continued From Page 25 

four foreign countries had 
made questionable payments 
totaling $126,000 since 1971. 

The Dei Monte Corporation, 
the world's largest canner of 
fruits and vegetables, said a 
foreign subsidiary had paid out 
cash, estimated at less than 
$50,000 a year, “in 'connec- 
tion with security measures 
and, to a lesser extent, to ob- 
tain prompt performance of 
routine duties by public em- 
ployees.” 

Del. Monte did not identify 
the foreign country, or the time 
period during which the pay- 
ments were made. 

The H. J. Heinz Company, a 
major manufacturer and mar- 
keter of ketchup, canned foods 
and baby foods, said a foreign 
subsidiary . had maintained a 
bank account which was not 
reflected on its books. 

^ Heinz said the account had 
paid out about $54,000 to ob- 
tain confidential commercial in- 
formation. Altogether, it said, 
the account, which had been 
closed, handled about 31.3 mil- 
lion sinde May, 1971. 

. About 150 companies have 
reported improper or illegal 
payments to the Securities and 
Exchange Commission, includ- 
ing about one-third of _ the 
nation’s 100 largest industrial 
corporations. 


18% 13 Am Moist .88 5 . 44 ,16ft 16% J6ft+ ft 
J7% Sft AmHome » 20 365 33%;33ft 33ft+ ft 
IW- 347r 34ft 34ft*. .ft 


12-MONTH TREND 

WEEKLY CLOSE 


37% 29ft AmHotp- M 21 
tft 2ft Am Invest 


3% 3%-.-% 


10ft Sft A Medid .12 7 95 9ft 9ft 9ft 4- ft 

8ft 5ft A Medicnrp 5 75 7ft 7% 7ft....’.. 


SeoLOcLNov.C 

1975 


ri.feb.MW. Apr. May June July Aug. 
1976' •• • . 


7% tft -Am Motor*- 7 263 4ft 4% 4% 

37V, 32% ANoIP Z647 145 36% 35% 36 - ft 


12% Oft AmSeot JO 6 28 18 


9% 10 + % 


1976 Stodcs and Dlv. Sal 
High Low . in Dollars P/E 


4 ’ 2ft Ow»T JQe .. . 7 

11 • 7ft Chelsea J8 5 15' _ 

52. 31ft Ctiamfn 1J0 6 36 

42ft 30Vi QimNY 2J8 7 1KT 
32% Z7% dtesapk Va 7 9 

30 25% ChesebOP .76 17 58 

40ft 34% Chessle 210 8 48 

.PA 4% ChIMIIw Ch .. 11 

14ft 8ft CMAUhtr pf ■ 7 
35% 25% CWFUeuT 2 II 80 - 

3% 2ft ChfcFufl .10t .. t • 

. 9ft . 4ft Chris Craft .. 37 

10%' 8 .OrsCTt of t .. 1 

15 9% Ctironwl 34 7 31 

67ft S3. Chroma of 5 .. 1 

22ft 1 0ft Chrysler -lie 17 Ml 
21ft 19ft OnBafl 1J0 8 4 

20% 17 CfmGE 1J412. 420 
IBS 90 ClnG Pf 9Jfl .. 210 l - 
35ft 18% CMWI4 1J0 15 20 " 

37ft 27% Ofioorp .96 12 S3S : 
55% 38ft GfiesSv 2.88 9 271 : 

5 1ft CltzSR 30t .. 22 

71ft 7 atvlnvsf J6 8 87 

1546 7-16 Cltylnv wt "... U 
22 Uft Crtyfn pfB 2 65 : 

' 10% io aivff-pf i.io .. k i - 

,45V: 25ft OarkE 1 JO 13 141 * 
13ft . 9 ClerkOfl JO 23 14 

73ft 47 Ctvaiff U0 13 9 4 

• 30 26ft CWEllll 156 9 25 *• 

86 77% aElll PT7J0 .. 099 I 

■ 121 raft aevei pr iz .. zno r 

; lift 10ft CtorcxCo J2 11 HI 1 
lift 7ft auetPea JO 6 47 

13% low CtoetfP of l .. 21 : 

: 14ft' 7% CoostSt Gas 4 532 1 
247« 17ft CsfSG pfU3 .. 20 I 

19% 13% CsfSG pfl.19. .. 20 1 

9ft 7% CocsBtla JOB 12 318 , 

95% 77ft CocbCoI 2J5 21 154 E - 

17ft Sft CoMwBIc .49 10 S. 1 . 

13ft. Sft GXeNat JO 7 5 1 ■ 

6ft 2% Colaco Ind 36 29 

31% 23% CotgPal J8 16 548 2 - 
51ft 46% CcfoP PEL50 .. Z30 5 ' - 
ISft IT CoUlnAHc S6 6 51 1 

8% 4% CoflJnF JHe- 7 : .I1 ■ 

• 34ft. .10 . Col Penn .JO 9 14 2 

JS\k 28ft Comnd 2' 7- MS 
-29% 18ft COH pf 1J0 .. 5 2 

79% 47ft Colt Of 435 .. -9 7 _ 

36ft 22% Col G*S 2.14 8 251 2 

M 56ft COIGs pf5J2 .. 15 

58% 54ft CoIGs .Pt5J8 .. 2 5 

7ft 4ft Cofum Wcf 5 63 : 

■ 25% Zlft-CUtSOh 104 7. fit 2 
108ft '101 r. CoSO Dfl0^-iV ,z600 W 

4% 1ft Caiwel Mta .. 2 ■ 

30% 12ft Cwribd Cam 9 45 i: 

48ft .32% Con* Eng, 2 11 -26 •* 
43ft 30 -CmE at T.7D ;. - V S. 

32 26% Camwi 2J0 9 W » X 

..10ft Sft ComEdB wt .. II 

jift 17% come pn^ .. i a. 

22% 20% ComE pn.tO .. 5 21 V 

23% 21% comwE pf-2 .. 3 2T,.r 

27 J5ft ComE pf247.« 386 2f 1 

31ft 29ft ComE JK2J7 .. '18 31 

83ft 77 CtmE pf7J4 M 3 M 

11% 8 COmwO .. 293 11 

22% 18 ■ ComCI pft.72- .. 2 X ' 

"31% 23ft Comsat 1 6 186 26 
38% 18ft Compugro JSe ft 1729 
ft ' 4 Comput Sd II 81 ft 
13 SftConAr J5 3 U 12 

56ft 37% .QneMil 2 4 15 44 

. .19% 12ft Gongolm JO .. 39 13 

18ft 13Vr ConnM IM 12 77 M 

25ft 20 Conrac- JOB 8 8 23 

in 15 GonEd 1J0 5 210 18 

66 . 594 CcnEd pf 6 .. 3 63. 

47% 39V5r CnE PTC4.6S .. Zft50 47 
51% 44 CoiCd of -5... 4 50 

34% 19ft ConFds US 10 82 23 ■ 

63 56% CUPP 0* 4J0 ‘ 2 0 

26H 18% ConFrgt JO 10 3» » . 

29 24%TonNGs 134 7 68 V . 
.114% 108% CnC pf law .. Z5» 112 
22 19 ConsuPgw 2 7 67 ® 

a 40 CflPW BMJO .. *2» £ 

75 '63% OiPw pf7.45 *20 73 

78 66% CnPw pf7.72 .. *4»- » 

71 66 CflPW PI7J6 .. ITTO WJ 

76% 67% ChPw pf7J8 .. *300 741 
68% 60ft CrtPw pfSJO. » I -«fr 


IRS' •• tort- 

loo's High Low Lost Chg 


8% AShip 1.079 5 5 11% 11%. 11%...-... 


27ft 16% AmStand 1 9 1232 27% 26% T7ft+- 1% 
76% 54% A Stdaf 4.75 .. 41 W% 73% 75Vt* 2 


l\* 6% Am&terlt i30 12 75 6% 6% 6%- % 
33 26% AmStrs 1.90 S 13 3Wi 29ft 30%.+ ft . 


59% SOftAnflf&T 3JB 11 1234 59V. SBft 59%+ ft 


62% 55 AmT&Ttf 4 
47ft 43ft ATT PIA3J4 
48% 45 ATT PfS3.74 


145 62 61ft 62 + ft 
22 469r 46 Vi 46ft.+ ..ft 
455 47% 46ft 47%+ ft 


10ft Oft AWatWR .70 5 21 9ft 9ft 9ft - V, 
14 12 'a AW prt US .. 2140 13ft 12ft 13%+' ft , 


21ft lift BaHyMf .Qto 16. 107 19ft 18ft. 19ft + ft 

25ft 22ft flaHGE 2.08 -8 89 25ft 25 - 25ft + ft 

16% 12% BanCa 1.15a 278 13 14ft 13% Bft- ft 

32% 16ft Bandag ,05a 13 129.20ft 20 20%- ' ft 

lift 4% Banfer Pint 4 23 9 ■ 8% ■ *%- ft 

20. 12%-BangP pf 2.. • 4 17ft 17ft 17ft 

23 28ft BkflJNY 230. 6.' 77.22ft 32 32ft 

16ft lift BfcofVa J8 6 12 13ft -13ft 13ft 

57ft -54% BartcAm 1JO 12 122 55ft 54% 54% T . .ft 

38 28ft BankTr ,3 J 173 34ft 34% 34%-rt - ft 


19% IS Amerun 15 18 15 

10% 5% AmesO .12e 5 17 10 


15 IS 

9ft 9%- % 


28% 25ft BnkT pf 2J0 
34% 25% BarbOII 1.60 .V 


7 .27% 27ft 27ft- ft 
21 32ft -32ft 32ft+ ft, 


24ft 19% Artttfdi U0 t U 22ft Zlft 22% 4- , ft 
19% 14ft Amfaclnc 1. 6 -32 ISft 15% . 1Sft+.. ft j 


lift BardCR 34 13 213 14 13ft 14 + ' 


35Vi 26 AMPIIK - J1 37 114 34% 33% 33%- ' ft 


8% Amoco .40a 6 


Oft Oft 9%. ! 


9% 4ft Amocx Coro 14 238 8% 8% 8ft+ % 
3% Ift Amreo Cop 27 . 1ft- 1% 


51% 16% Amrtar 170 b 44 45 44% 44% - % 

9 Tft Amsfr pf J3 3 8ft 8% 8ft+ ft , 


35*41 22 Barns 1.60 8 
->6% 7ft fisstclnc JO- 7 
.30 ■ 22% BafesMf -JO 13 
39% 27ft Bauscty- -80 9 

46ft 33 BaxtTrv Jl 26 
20ft 17ft BaySfG- 1.88 6 
.28 . 17 .Beaiing .50-11 


.5 . 35% 35 35ft 

36 15%. 15% 15ft- ft 

18 24ft 24 24 - ft 

82 29ft 29% 29ft + % 

90 42% 41ft 41ft- % 

10.19ft 19% 19%.- % 
30 24ft 24ft 24ft- ft 


45ft 34 A meted 
8 4ft Amtpl 


2 7 » 45ft 45ft 45ft + % 
32 6 16 5ft Sft 5W+ ft 


295-1 17% Amccnd JO .. 174 -29ft 29 21ft:..... 

32 22ft AncfcrH 1 30 7 10 3m 30ft 30%-% .ft 


45ft SffA AndCW 1.60. 8 111 47 41ft 41ft-. ft 
.8% 6 Angelica .16-9 49 6ft . 6ft -6%- . ft 


lD% Oft Anbrter J0 6' 
17ft 8% AnsufCo J» .. 


a • -7ft -7ft 

8ft . 8% - tft+ ft 


19% 10ft, Apache JO 7 50 left 18% 18%- ft 
29ft 23ft Apco Oil 177 '26. 28ft 28ft 29%....,. 

Sft , 1ft Agees Carp .. 18 2 1ft 1ft.'. 

77 .68 AbPw pf7J0 .. 3200 73 73 73 - % 

'4ft 2% Applkf Meg 12 1 3ft- 3ft 3ft-, -ft 


131% 111% SeatFd pf <4 .. 
28ft 22ft Bedunn.-J8:16 . 
' '42ft 34 BectDiCk JO 18 
23ft 14 BeechA" .80 7 
■ 17ft -JW'Bficer Jl.- 5 
20% 13ft BdOOP. JOe 1 7 
24ft 15ft Bidden ■ TJZ 9- 
11%. • 7- ' BekanHe -J& 7- 


J4 14 160 ' 27 26ft 27 + % 


5 132% 132% 132%+ 2ft 
Jr . 34ft, 24% 24%..„.. 
51 37ft 37ft 37ft+. % 

« a *1% 2T% - % 
24 ■ 9 •. » 9 . * ft 
21 19% 19% 19% - % 
S 24% 24 24- - % 

21 9% 9ft ?%- % 


25%. ^15 BHIHDW J4 1(26,20% 20% 20>A- %■ 

30 13ft BeihbCp 1 8 "17 18ft 18% 18% 

45ft 39%' Bendfx ; 7.72 9 157 4lft 4r - 41ft+ ft 


66 Bendbc pf .3 .: -3 83% 83% 83% - ft 

25% 17W BfififlCp 1J5 .6 39 23% 23ft 23%+ % 

28%- 25% e«fl 5bf-2J0. .. z» 28 28 28 


14ft Pft ArataN J3 7 14 U* lift 11%...^, 


22% Arcafi4 Of 2 .. 


31% 20% ArchBMl JO 11 ' 182 24 23ft 24 ..j 


3% ■ Arctic entr n 


3 'h -lft^rtslor 


21 4ft: 4ft 4ft...:.'. 

22 ,2ft. 2ft 2ft- % 


28%- 25% Bnfl 5of 2J0. '.. Z» 28 2B 28 
- 4JA ■ 1% BenfStd Mta -.. M0. 1ft 1ft fift.i.... 

,2ft ..1%'Bknguet B.0Tb 6,S2 1ft 1ft 1ft- . ft 
-‘5ft- 2ft Beffcev-PiM-'.. 1 27 4%- 4 "-4%+'%- 


17ft 15 ActzPSv 1 Jo 7 IS 17 16ft 17 + ft 
111% 103ft ArtPuf 10.70 ... tUW -109ft 109 1Mft...-.r#. 


14ft 6 ArkBest J5 .. 4 13 12ft 12ft- % 

27% 21% ArfcLGs 1.70 8 24 27 28% 27 + % 

4ft 2ft Arlen.RltvD - , » ».3VS W*-. 'ft 
5ft. ’4% Armada Co 13 4 jft 5% Sft.r.Ci 

35% 26U Armen 1 JO 10 205 Bft 33ft 33%: . -cr: 

32ft 27 Arm pf 2.10 .. 146 31% 31 « 31% 

52 44% Artur Df 4.75 ..21000 SOW 50ft 'SPS- % 

32ft 23ft AnnatCk 1 12 165 26ft .26 . 26% - % 


'-■Sft' 2ft Bertcev-Pho--.. l V 4%- 4 -'-4%+‘%- 
19ft ‘13ft Best PfDd W OF 18% 17ft 17ft- ft 
...48.. .33.JBea5tl_J2.9. J»6L..41ft 41ft, 41%-.,%. 
33ft —J2~ - BlgTlinr JD 18 -47-32ft~32% '32%- -ft 

28ft 21 BlfldiDr JO 23 WZ 21% Z1 21ft 

lift 5 BlalrJhn JB 8 26 loft KM 10ft- %- 


20ft 15 ArmRu JOe 6 15 20ft 20%' 20ft...... 

17ft 12ft AraCorp 1 7 ■ 1 16ft 16ft 16ft- % 


16 - 9ft Arvtn J6e 5 72 IS 14ft Mft...... 

27% 2Sft Arvlnln pf 2 ... 12 27%' 27% 27% 


*17% IWRBIfestati: Tbt 6 V9MS UftfUft.#.!. 1 
^20% 14ft BMckHR- '»%-»> + ..% 

48% SSft'BlueBen 1.60 * 32 41 40% 40ft+ ft 

5%- -3ft BhntKrd Inc 6 14- d 4ft 4ft- ft 

6ft 2ft Bobbie arks 52 13 4% 4 4ft+ % 

'43% -wit Bbtfoo . 1 n 7346 42 41% 42 - ft 

SOfti-ZIft.-BoteeCOS ,« ID.. 150; [26ft. 26ft 26ft-. ft 
31ft 26 . BOfdsn 1.40. 9 .10?. 3Tft‘ 31ft '31H+ %' 

m -ioft iwuibp k-ia arittte tyi non. _ . u. 


Dual Purpose Funds 


20 13% Asarco JO 26 161 17% 17 17% 

29ft 19ft AsMOH 1J0 « 180 27% 27%. 27ft 


40 JTft AMDrG 1J0 9.29 28 Wft 28 + ft 
14ft 8ft Altllone JO 5 23 13% 13ft 13%- :% 


30% 19% Borwfer ‘IJS'10 
4% 2ft Bormans 5 
24ft 22ft BasEd 2J4 11 
12 1IW BasE pt 1.17 
34% 13v4,8«E pf IJ& .. 


81 ‘29% S«ft 28ft- .ft 
,1ft 3ft. 3ft 3ft..—.. 
35 23ft 23ft 23ft- ' % 
15 lift 11% .llft^.... 
28 U%- 14% 14%- % 


wesk ended Am. «, 1976 
FdltovlnB is. # .netiy Itsfiisa ef fbe 
“"audited net asser value amiable to tin 
capital stuns of doM-Amne lowsiimcal. 
anpanles al daw ef business Friday. Alto 
.dmra are. dosing listed marker orlces or 
brtt over-ttehcoonter deater-KHteater asked 
prices For the caeUil shares of cadi cmneamr 
wfih the PBB Bifaw dHferenm (dlxoant or 
PrOmteml between the not asset value and 
tea astnd Prien of te» capital shares. 

Coo. 

Shares NJL Val. DIK. 

Prime Cap Shn. % 
American Dual . . 6ft’ 8J4 — 1 19 J 

Gemini Capital- ... 14% 21-98 -32J 

rtraispticre 1J6 +1Z2 

Inome > Cap. Wt 9.97 —34.9 


4% 1ft Atfco Mtg 


19ft 17% AIICVEI 1J4 B II 19 -19 19 

104% 81 AllRidi 120 12 170 101ft 101 101%+. % 


14% oftBraterr .24 n 43s- 12% 12% m- i&- 
Jl% 15% BRnjnCF JO 7 33 27 - 26% 26% - « 


soft SOft AtlRdl Wl • .J 
176% 137 AtlRdl nf 3 .. 


2 51 51 . 51 .+ ft 

1 170% 170ft 170ft- ft 


23ft ; 77ft Brig S*T .9217 .. 7 28% 28% 28%- ft 

83ft 66% BrfSfMy 1,80,17 151 80ft 79% 80 - V. 

"50% '42ft BflUMpf 2 .. 100 48 47V, 48 


49 . 4<ft All Rcpf 3.75 .. 2200 47ft ' 47ft 47ft + ft 
67% 54ft AttRC pf 2J0 — 126 - 63% 63% 63ft- ft. 


Tft 3ft AlW Call 10 120 Sft 5ft S%+ ft 


. 13ft - 10% BrltPaf JSe 16 .22 10ft 10% 10%+ ft 

36% 25ft BrjnrGT 1J0 7 37 33% 37% 33%+ % . 

18ft’ 16% BklyUG 1.72 8 ‘ 48 17% 17% 17% 


35% 32% Auto Ddto 


70.44 33% 33%-"* 


7% 4% Alrtmlnd 44 5 .41 6% 6ft 6%+ % 


15 tft Aveo Corp 2 
1% 9-16 AvcoCp wt .. 
41ft 18% AvcoCo Of : .. 
29ft 23% Autry Int J6 31 
13ft ’7% Avis Inc B 
20% 10% AvneHnc JO B 


IS 13% 13% 13ft-. % 

11 1% 1% 1%: 

142 41 40ft 40ft- ft' 

6 25% 25% J5%+ % 

m I i.u. 'lit , 


-8% Ak-BwnSvo 40 
.13% 10% BrownC .lie S 
26 16% BwrtCto 1 JO 8 


7 7.6% 7 + % 

1 12% 12% 12% 

8 29% 23% 23%+.- % 


■ft 5% BiwnFer .20 10 ' 107 6% 6ft ‘6ft- % 


16ft ti.. Bninswk-J4 u 
26% 11 BfUShW jo 10 


B5 11% 18 18% - ft 

9 25ft 24% 25’A- % 


1233 lift 11% ’ll%+ ft 
97 20% 19%- 20%+ % 


48% 32ft AvOnPd 1J0 17 514 4*ft 45"> 45ft- V, 


30’* 10 ' BUCVEr J6 IV 90 20% »ft 26%.../.. 

19ft 9> BuddCo J 4 x!38 19% 19 , 19 + % 

SB 49 BuddCP Pf 5 .. v» 56 56 56 - ft 


BTMta .300 


II 2% 2% Ta. 


SB'-l taft eobdtVWI I 8 ITS M 25ft ISP.- U 


.0% 4% BuArind J4t S 
26% . 20% Bvfffft 1 JOB 16 


14% tft Bache JOe 4 27 9 

I2 1 * 8% Baker) n 24 l 64 9 

54 40% BakrlrtH J2 14 . 45. *> 

13% B% BaldOH .68 7 3 13 


8% W- % 
8ft 9 + % 
49ft’ 50% - % 

13 i3 


lift 4 autev* .057 .. 

71ft Wft BOnkHH 1J»- .. 
16% 11% Bunkr on JO .. 


M 55 56 56 - ft 

7 7% 7% 7%+ % 
10 -23% 23% .23%- Vk 
12 8% 7% m- % 

8 21% 21 21 - % 
1. 75% 15% 15%* % 


' 9ft 4%"Sunk Ramo ... " 26' «Vj 8% B%+ % 
34 23% Burlintf 1J0 8 SSI 27ft 77% 27ft + *’ 


r ; i -L 




-- 








^t«jp 




* '.--its 


3 « 
293 77 
2 ft ■ 






•' ^ v ' m’r: 


4 50 
I 82 23 
' 2 63 

39 79. 
fit 27- 
Z520 113 
67 ® 
ran 47 

• 120 73 
*90 % 
zm 741 

a» ™ 

1 -06V- 






25% 18%, BSHCo .80 6. 11 71% 21ft 21%^ Vk| -.«% Ilft.-fHlHMS -JNe * , » «-. .44%- ft , 


Continued ott PageZ 








it* ij£k> 




’f 

"■"* .*se 
: . s '^ji 



/ 








J%tion Affairs 

.%> 


l Court Restrains 


s of Instant Kodak 


Aug. 6 (Reuters) 
j -.'S' . High Court to- 
«• j i interim injunc- 
: vt. ng the Eastman 
: S any from manu- . 
. ; :■% selling its new 
. ■ -?' 'ra and film in 


“Oiid. Corporation 
-' .the injunction 
>^k Ltd., the cor- 
‘ ■•tish unit On June 
that Kodak's 
1m infringed on 
tents owned by 


deliveries through the 200 
mile system are expected to 
begin late next year. 

Initial, delivery, capacity 
is. to be .933 million cubic 
feet jf gas a day with ulti- 
mate -expansion bringing 
capacity to 2 billion cubic 
feet of gas daily. 


THE NEW YORK TIMES. SATURDAY, AUGUST 7 r 1976 



Currencies of France and 
Belgium Drop— Gold Up- 
South Africa Shares Off 


•l#** 5 * 

#5 






jurt's announce- 
issued a state- 
s headquarters 
■:..New York, say- 
*■’ ippeal the deci- 
v-ts possible. 

;■ 'iny said that 
‘"■•jaw the injunc- 
t in any way 
jdgment on the 
he patents in- 










and film manu- 
Said the deci- 
e no effect on 
; .instant camera 
- m tries outside 


ags* - 


ss 

m- 


$ -said issuance 
: - ion has separate 
fit-infringement 
--'. by Polaroid 
[% which is still 


U.S. Changes Stand 
On Potash Dumping 

The Treasury Department 
said that it was modifying 
an Anti-Dumping Act order 
against potash imports from 
Canada. The department said 
that four Canadian compa- 
nies — Brookville Chemical 
Industries, the Hudson Bay 
Mining and Smelting Compa- 
ny, The Swift .Canadian Com- 
pany and Corainco Ltd. — had 
stopped selling potash to 
United States buyers at non- 
competitive low prices. 

The four had exported pot- 
ash valued at ¥47.4 million 
to this country last year. 
However, the Treasury De- 
partment said that penally 
duties would still be assessed 
on “one or two other Cana- 
dian companies*' which were 
not identified. 


LONDON, Aug. 6 (AP>— The 
West German mark edged up- 
ward against the dollar today 
on European currency ex- 
changes. while the Belgian and 
French francs weakened. 

The price of gold advanced 
in both London and Zurich, 
Europe’s two main bullion cen- 
ters. But South African gold 
mining shares on the London 
! Stock Exchange hit a three- 
year low amid fears over fresh 
South African racial violence. 

Gold closed at $112.75 an 
ounce in London and $112,875 
iu Zurich. AC yesterday’s close 

Za. AHA MIP 


y 

2r. 


;s Gas Rate 


£ ^v s uas J 

tor i\ Y^ panies 

* A,l}rON Aug. 










-'±- 


?’ * 


_ 6(AP) 
N J Power Com- 
d today to let 
gas producers 
-hore from Lou- 
tir product at a 
“ han the ceiling 
thousand cubic 
veek. 

ceiling — which 
■ e times the in- 
rice ceiling im- 
• commission — 
ider court chal- 
ion on whether 
postpone, the 
s expected from 
eais court soon. 
'J.C. order ap- 
> gas sold by 
int venture of 
. Gas Develop- 
tion and Energy 
—and by Forest 
urc, a joint op- 
lumbia Develop- 
Forest Oil-Cor- 


McDonnell Contract 

The McDonnell Douglas 
Corporation said it awarded 
a $63.9 million contract to 
thp Hughes Aircraft Company 
for research, testing and de- 
velopment of F-18 aircraft 
radar. McDonnell Douglas 
said the contract covered 
radar for the initial il test 
F-18 fighter planes that are 
part of a full-scale develop- 
ment program, and includes, 
three renewal- options cover- 
ing additional production 
beyond the development 
phase of the F-18 program. 


Consumers Power 
Lifts Plant Estimate 


> 

■ Uows Coleve to 

‘.;'i ' 

as to Columbia 


ment Corpora- 


Jeston; W. Va.. 

!■" r _ 

$1.44 per thou- 

=• 

for Forest Oil 
gas to Colum- 

* 

• of SL52 per 


•feet 

.... • 

’.C. order also 

i-f.".- . 

jrporations to 

> • • • 

raise their 

<r t- . ■ '• • • 

: ents per thou- 


ally. Columbia 

taka - ■ 

erves natural 

it- — 

Vest Virginia, 

. y.L. - • 

‘ o, Maryland, 


- ■_ /irginia. New 


sylvania. 


■ ?ion said the . 

S*. *s--v ■ • • - 

;re needed for 


.tions to make 


- producing the 


ther company 

to make the 

Tnj— •>, j, v 

ifeju tit. - • • " • 

/the gas were 


J ceiling price. 


- ttles 

jL'juV"'* •• — ta 

esia 


The Consumers Power 
Company announced that its 
long-delayed nuclear power 
plant project at Midland, 
Mich., wiii now cost approxi- 
mately $1.67 billion instead 
of the previously announced 
$1-4 billion. 

The Michigan utility traced 
the higher completion cost to 
the new requirements of the 
United States Nuclear Regu- 
latory Commission and in- 
herent increases as more de- 
tailed engineering design was 
completed. 

Stephen H. Howell, vice 
president for construction, 
noted that Federal require- 
ments are "ever-changing 
and the company Iras at- 
tempted to anticipate these 
changes as responsibly as 
possible, these changes in re- 
quirements, which are not 
under the company’s - control, 
continue to increase the Mid- 
land project cost” ' 

Completion date for the 
plant is now in 1982 and it 
will be desired to provide 13 
million kilowatts of electric- 
ity to the Consumers Power 
system and up to 4 million 
pounds per hour of process 
steam to the Dow Chemical 
Company’s manufacturing fa- 
cilities at Midland. 


it stood at $112,625 in both 
centers. 

In Paris, where the franc lost 
almost 1 percent in value dur- 
ing the day, dealers called the 
currency market chaotic. The 
franc closed at 4.98375 to the 
dollar, down from 435 yester- 
day. ~The weakness showed 
against all currencies, including 
the unsteady pound and Italian 
lira. 

The dollar generally advanced 
around Europe except against 
the West German mark. At the 
close of business in Frankfurt, 
the dollar was worth 23395 
marks against 234 yesterday. 

The increasing value of the 
mark is the cause of current 
pressure on the seven-nation 
joint European currency float 
This pressure has particularly 
affected the French franc, 
which dropped out of the float 
agreement last March. Dealers 
said the French currency has 
now lost 11 percent of its value 
against the mark since March. 

Meanwhile, pressure on the 
Belgian franc — a joint float 
partner with the mark, the 
Dutch guilder, Norwegian, 
Swedish and Danish crowns 
and the Luxembourg Franc — 
pushed it slightly outside its 
2.25 percent trading margin; 
with the mark late today. It 
happened after the Belgian and 
West German central banks! 



27 


Abercrombie & Fitch Planning 
To File Under Bankruptcy Act 


Continued Prom Page I, CoL 5jChristnm, when the chain 

should have had a good season 


Tin. ,. The New York Times 

when Abercrombie & Fitch held a midwinter sale in 1970, customers lined up to get into 
store. Since then business has fallen, and the company has filed under bankruptcy law. 


Leyland Sputters a Bit More Smoothly 


Continued From Page 25 


I had withdrawn from the mar-[ 
ket for the day. _ 

The Belgian franc was quoted] stricted sourc 
at .06468 marks, just below its | ““ M 

support . point of .0647 marks.] 

A dealer said no one wanted! to pay the same interest 
to be caught with Belgian} «tes that other big compa- 
francs in case there was a; mes pay 
weekend realignment of curren-: lenders 


“I don’t consult anybody if 
1 want to lay people off. We 
just lay them off.” Indeed, 
over the last year, Leyland 
has laid off 36,000 workers, 
few of whom are ever likely 
to return. 

Like most of the men who 
run the Government's facto- 
ries, steel mills, utilities, 
transportation networks, 
post offices, shipbuilders and 
aircraft producers, Mr. Park 
came from private industry. 
Although trained as an engi- 
neer, he spent his career in 
the planning and financial 
areas of Rank Xerox. Cum- 
mins Engine and Monsanto. 

Source of Funding 

He joined Leyland as fi- 
nance director in January 
1974 and was made chief 
executive the month the Gov- 
ernment took over. 

"I feel Tm still in free 
enterprise," he said. "I look 
upon roy funding, for exam- 
ple. no differently from how 
anybody else looks at his 
funding, except I have a re- 
the Govern- 
ment.” He can get Govern- 
ment aid, he said, but he has 


their commercial 


cies. 

Under the float agreement.! 
central banks must Umit the! 
fluctuations of currencies, one] 
against another, to 235 per-i 
cent This means every time -thei 
mark rises it forces the other! 
six to keep up at artificially, 
high levels. i 


CHECKING CLIMBS I 
AT SAVINGS BANKS! 


Alcoa Shipping 
Bauxite to U.S. 




Mr- 


- ■■■ 




fissrr - 
L X* -■ 


#7-7' 


Company said 
ed recently to 

- rating condi- 
• uniha, the to-; 

. awned petro- 

and for cash 
?ertamina of 
■n to be made 
in the first 
Natomasjsaid 
s included an 
recovery time 
: i of company 
aesian opera-- 
; emt from the 
25 percent- 

- said that be- 
greemeut, its 
ie 6 months 
reported last 
s reduced by 

would be re- 
natdy.for the 




e Xp Go 
:xas 

P. pipeline nek 


The Aluminum Company of 
America confirmed that it 
had begun within the past 
week shipping bayxite to this 
country, a spokesman said 
that bauxite shipments had 
been resumed to take the 
place of alumina shipments 
— the next step in the refin- 
ing of bairate-^-after an ex- 
plosion on July 5 had forced 
the closing of two. digestion 
units at the Clarendon Works 
in Jamaica. 

The overall situation .in 
Jamaica has been clouded for 
some time; but the Jamaican 
Government has reached 
agreements for 51 percent 
ownership of Kaiser and 
Reynolds operations on the 
island. Those agreements al- 
. lowed the Government to 
buy back all the land the 
two companies owned for 
mining, operations. 


-vi 

jv. 


is reserves in 
area offshore 
biiilfc soon by 

rel Resources; 
-. Peoples Gas- 
. . Texas Gas 
'Corporation, 
.flies, lac. and 

3as Pipeline 
*. group said 


Inspiration Dividend 

Directors of the Inspiration 
Consolidated Copper Com- 
pany resumed dividend pay- 
ments by . announcing a 25 
cents a share common stoat 
dividend payable Sept 8 to 
shareholders of record Aug. 
18. The last payment was 20 . 
cents 1 in the 1975 fourth " 
quarter. A recovery in de- 
mand for copper and higher, 
earnings accounted for the. 
dividend .resumption. . 


Continued From Page 25 

in 


the 


a general turnaround 
outlook for deposits.” 

He added: “The net infkw 
of July was probably induced j 
by the relative calm which pre- 
vailed In the money markets,; 
where short-term rates actually; 
dropped slightly during the; 
course of the month.” 

Prior to the legalization of[ 
checking - accounts in May, 
under the Cincotta-ConkHn BQ],! 
saving flows general jy were e. 
byproduct of -money market! 
fluctuations. When the interest 
rates on money market invest- 1 
roents. such as Treasury bills,) 
moved sharply above savings] 
account interest rates, money; 
tended to flow out of savings; 
accounts. 

Under the Federal Reserve’s 
Regulation Q, savings banks 
can pay no more than 5^4 per- 
cent interest on short-term 
deposits. When money market 
rates climb to the area of 8 
percent or more, the disadvan- 
tage m keeping funds in sav- 
ings accounts- often leads to 
withdrawals.. 

The potential for heavy sav- 
ings outflows arose again this 
week, when the "Treasury off- 
ered $7.6 billion of its new 8 
percent -10-year notes. The of- 
fering was oversubscribed by a 
wide margin and the notes 
were awarded in amounts of 
$300,000 or less, indicating that 
the buyers included many indi- 
vidual savers. . 

The 8 percent level is consid- 
ered the point when savings 
be£h to flow out of banks, 
which can pay up to 1% per - 
cent " on term deposit certifi- 
cates of sut-aud sevea-year ma- 
turities, yielding compound in- 
terest or 8.17 percent. 


Mr. Park, who is a bit 
hefty, works in shirtsleeves 
and has the open, enthusiastic 
manner of a well-scrubbed 
cheerleader. ‘Tm happy 
wherever I am.” he said. 

Mr. Park got all his school- 
ing. m his home town of Mid- 
dlesborough. Yorkshire, and 
became a petty officer m the 
Royal Navy. He has a wife 
and four sons. 

Visits Factories 

He said he liked to visit 
the factories and talk with 
the workers— -unusual in a 
country where the “we-they” 
division of management and 
labor is rigid tradition. His 
one superior, outside the Gov- 
ernment. is Sir Richard Dob- 
son, Leyland’s . part-time 
chairman and former head of 
the British-American Tobacco 
Company. 

Mr. Park's company car, 
the c-ne assigned to him to 
reflect bis status, is a -Daimler, 
Leyland’s closest equivalent 


to a Rolls-Royce. But he pre- 
fers the sturdy Range Rover. 
He has a quarter-scale model 
- of one on a pedestal in his 
office. 

_ Despite his freedom in run- 
ning Leyland, Mr. Park ac- 
knowledged that he did feel 
a closeness with Government 
Officials in some instances. 
This week, for example, he 
bad to help leaders of the 
Labor Administration prepare 
Leyland’s case for 8178 mil- 
lion in financial aid and sell 
it to the leaders of the Con- 
servative opposition to win 
Parliament’s approval for 
part of it. 

Annoyed by Press 
The money-rafsing process, 
however, doesn’t annoy Mr. 
Park nearly so much as the 
press. Since Leyland is now 
owned by the British taxpay- 
er. the press has been vigi- 
lant in monitoring the com- 
pany's progress. 

“We live in a goldfish 
bowl." he said. "We're word 
fodder for journalists. If 
someone sneezes, they find 
a way to write a thousand 
words about it W e lose an 
awful lot of time over that.” 
Nationalization, neverthe- 
less, has its virtues, such as 
easy access to the Govern- 
ment' For example, Leyland 
quickly dissuaded the 
Chancellor of the Exchequer, 
Denis Healey, from seeking 
a substantial increase in the 
tax charged Britons who 
have free company care. 
Such cars are a atandard 
"perk" in Britain — and Ley- 
land sells a lot of them. Mr. 
Healey had proposed the tax 
in his budget message. 

The Government’s chang- 
ing attitude toward regulat- 
ing the economy and its na- 
tionalized industries has pro- 
duced some disquieting prob- 
lems for Mr. Park and others 
in British management. 

Accord on Wages 
To reduce Britain's rate of 
inflation — more than 25 per- 
cent a year ago — the Govern- 
ment last year obtained trade 
union agreement to limit 
workers' wage increases. But 
anyone earning more than 
£8,500 (about SI 5,000) a year 
has. been denied any in- 
creases at all. 


"Our biggest anxiety at the 
moment," Mr. Park said, “is 
job rotation in British man- 
agement, People’s salaries 
are frozen, so they leave one 
company to go lo another." 

He wouldn't say how many 
such men Leyland had lost 
or gained for that reason, but 
he said that job-hopping had 
swept through the automo- 
bile industry. 

Another problem is the 
legacy of old cars that Mr. 
Park inherited. Leyland's 
only truly small car is the 
aging, boxy Mini, which will 
not be replaced for another 
year or so. It has been over- 
whelmed by newer Renaults. 
Datsuns, Fiats and Vo Iks - 
wagens. Soon it will have to 
face the Fiesta, a newcomer 
from the Ford Motor 
Company's European subsidi- 
aries. 

“I envy them," Mr. Park 
said of Ford. "They’re going 
to have a ball. They're going 
to knock hell out of Volks- 
wagen and Renault." He 
didn’t have to add British 
Leyland. 


negotiated, Abercrombie & 
Fitch said yesterday, to pro- 
vide funds for purchasing in 
ventory and for other working 
capital needs. 

A recent study by a compan- 
ny approached by Abercrombie 
& Fitch as a possible buyer of 
its operations indicates that the 
bulk of the drain on Abercrom- 
bie has come from its New 
York and Chicago stores, which 
have the only losses in the 
nine-store group. The concern 
also has stores in San Francis- 
co; Oak Brook, Hi.; Short Hills, 
NX; Palm Beach and Bal Har- 
bor, Fla.; Colorado Springs, and 
Troy, Mich. 

Since 1970 the company has 
lost more than $2.5 mill ion, 
despite a variety of shifts in 
merchandising approaches to 
prop up Its fading consumer 
image. Mr. Haskell, formerly 

the Mayor of Wilmington, Del., 
has been a large Abercrombie 
& Fitch stockholder for some 
time. He assumed the compa- 
ny's top post several years 
ago after the successive resig- 
nations of several presidents. 

Long a retailer that offered 
great depth of stock, wide as- 
sortment and the most opulent 
sporting goods, Abercrombie & 
Fitch found in recent years 
that its high expenses and 
j squeeze on profits compelled it 
to cut back on carrying some 
of the most lavish equipment 
and clothing that had lured 
wealthy sportsmen from around 
the world. Among items that 
were discontinued were a 
$6,000 custom-made rifle, a 
SI ,200 dog sled and an $18,000 
gold-and-onyx chess- set. 

But, as recent shoppers no- 
ticed, the financial pressures 
also began to affect the more 
moderately priced items, with 
some shrives appearing to be 
□early bare. 

According to trade observers 
yesterday, Abercrombie & Fitch 
became a victim of both the 
discount-store trend (which 
particularly affected sporting 
goods since many discount 
stores used them as' promotion- 


hut didn’t, the company suf- 
fered a severe cash drain and 
management commenced to 
look for a buyer of the concern. 

By contrast, another sporting 
goods chain based in New York, 
Herman's World of Sporting 
Goods, had only three stores 
when it was acquired by W. R, 
Grace Inc. in 1970 hut has 
since expanded to 100 stores 
and is reportedly very profit- 
able. 

Several times Abercrombie & 
Fitch created bargain-hunter 
excitement — a move that raised 
eyebrows in the retail field 
because of the concern’s tradi- 
tional carriage- trade approach 
—by clearing out slow-selling 
items at extremely low prices. 

In an attempt to convince 
the public that Abercrombie’s 
is a “pretty human place — it’s 
not all that stufiy,” as Earle 
K. Angstadt (then the presi- 
dent) put it, tbe chain sold 
$1,125 video recorder sets for 
$199 and a $1,500 Hovercraft, 
which was not in perfect con- 
dition, for $3. 

It was, other retailers ob- 
served, a strange switch for 
a store that had sold safari 
gear to Theodore Roosevelt and 
had equipped Adm. Richard E. 
Byrd for his expedition to 
Antarctica. 

Perhaps the most frequent 
trade criticism of Abercrombie 
& Fitch in recent years has 
been the assertion that “what 
it really needs is a professional 
merchant” 

Yesterday, in announcing the 
appointment of Mr. Swaebe, 
who had been the May' Com- 
pany's president and chairman 
for 20 years. Mr. Haskell - ob- 
served, "It is believed that Mr. 
Swaebe can give the company 
the retail expertise necessary 
for its future success." 


Business Records 


BANKRUPTCY PROCEEDINGS 
50UTifE*N DISTRICT 
Ffldar, Aus. 6. 1V7C 

Pillion bv; 

ROBERT C. SHARPS. S.R.. MI Ufdvelli 51. 
Tjpki,, n.y. Liabilities, 3JJC3; isstfr 

al leaders) and it$ own changes !bCR7?fc= iqa dworett, mo Yort 


N.r. LUoiiiiioj. =tii*i* riw. 


tPniiTP I HUE' 1 u LIU, dclrvg business n Bounty 
tenure,; Fn)j| a vcKWDIe Ms-fcJ. W E. 25 St.. 


in merchandising. 

Under Mr. Haskell's 

lower-priced goods were added, | ny. uwi-i-i-s. s»«,om; aticii. iKo. 
such as $34 sleeping bags and ■'Jhh f^d£Ric>l psters j.. *>^asantviti«, 
S40 jackets. But since last 1 m * 


Let Value Line Help You Identify 

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TO AVOID NOW 

Plus 100 stocks that may outperform 
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Remote Security Device 
For Autos Is Developed 


An otherwise solid stock portfolio can be largely un- 
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to identify "weak" stocks as well as “strong” ones. 
And to be immediately aware ot significant changes 
In any of your stocks. 


That's why The Value Line Investment Survey every 
week of the year ranks 1600 stocks— each relative to 
all the others— tor Probable Market Performance in 
the next 12 Months, as follows: 


100 slocks are ranked 1 (Highest) 

300 stocks are ranked 2 (Above Average) 
800 stocks are ranked 3 (Average) 

300 stocks are ranked 4 (Below Average) 
too stocks are ranked 5 (Lowest) 


Continued FFom Page 25 


basic principles of the Sirling 
heat engine. The sunlight is 
collected, on the pump hous- 
ing and expands air in a 
chamber, forcing . out water 
in one portion of the cycle. 
Water from the source cools 
the air before the operation 
is repeated. NASA is willing 
to grant licenses under the 
patent to American compa- 
nies. 

* 

Roof-Gutter Cleaner 

A North Carolina inventor 
has tackled a problem that 
faces many home owners — 
cleaning roof gutters from 
the ground. James W. Earp 
Jr. of Raleigh was granted 
Patent 3,972352 for the de- 
vice this week. 

At the end of a rod held 
by the operator is a pair of 
small arms aimed downward 
and held open by a spring. 
The arms fit in the gutter, 
and when a rope is pulled 


■y- • 

*•:. 


Aluminum Joins Industry Ingot Price Rise 


S* t- ;; ^ . 

, , aoum 

a 3 aluminum 

? - je‘ ■ •} 

. iiser Alummuns 

; '5 ; ■' 

rporation, yes- 

4a. , ' 4 ■*’ 

flie top two 

#£* N- . 

•.* he AlimrinuiE 

# .r ; • 

; lerica and the 

a * 

rroids Metals 

: 

- apany.— -and 

>£■. ;.y* •. ■ 

. si • 

. ' ed its price tor 


' nary aiurainum 

- • ^ ‘ 

' it by 4 cents 

: . 

48 cents - a 

is* •• • 

.'As ‘J 

e with new 

2*. • • • 

V - 

. 1 shipments on 

. . . 

hafor competi- 


that prices or 

\*-:f "• 

billet products 

otf. *- -• ••• 

. .bricafed alum- 

;' -‘A '. V.j ■ : 

would also be 


me. Kaiser hac 

*s* >• 

- , • 

■ ‘ d its intema- 



. 

,4.«r - 

i .vxtir ~-..i > r\ tv-rv" 

"i my • \ 


tional price for aluminum by 5 
cents to 4& . cents a pound, , ef- 
fective with shipments of Aug. 

16.. 7 ; 

Revere Copper and Brass Inc., 
and the aluminum -division of 
the Anaconda .Company also 
went along with these increases 
yesterday. Others, including the 
Alcan Aluminum Corporation 
and the Pechiney Ugine Kuhl- 
mann Corporation ; indicated 
they were studying. the situa- 
tion- 

Meanwhile, the expected 
round of price .increases' for 
mc Began . yesterday as .Texasr 
gulf Inc. announced that it bad 
raised its.- prices for Canadian 
zinc by 1.5 cents so that, prime 
Western and . - high-grade zinc 
will be .383 cents a pound, con- 
tinuous.- line zinc . with con- 
trolled lead will be 30.75 cents 


and- special' high-grade and con- 
tinuous line zinc with alum- 
inum added will -sell for 39 
cents. 

Earlier this week, Texasgulf 
increased United States zinc 
prices hy 3 cents to 40 cents 
a pound which, considering cur- 


■ in a separate juicing action. 
Imperial Tobacco Products, 
Ltd, a subsidiary of Imasco, 
Ltd, said in Montreal that it 
was raising the .price of ciga- 
rettes to wholesalers by 40 
cents a thousand, effective Aug. 
16. The Canadian company 


rency exchange rates, would dgarattes under a vari- 

roughly equivalent to the newjjy of 

Canadian prices. The company Mauner and Playeris, 

noted that .Canada's Anti-Infla- 
tion Board -had reported that 
‘‘prenotification isn't required 
with respect to zinc prices." : 


LONDON METAL MARKET 
(la kxxk!) sterling net metric tool 


ration followed - TexasgulFs 
lead yesterday • and posted a 
new domestic zinc prices of 40 
cents, up 3 cents a pound, for 
prime- Western and high grade 
zinc, -effective Monday. All its 
prices'*™ f.d-bl -Josephtown, 


WIRE BARS 

COPPER 

Class 

SP«a 

SS3 

e ui 

Forward 

m 

9 svi 



LEAD 

Soot 

2» 

o 7m 

Forward 

270 

9 m 



TlH 

Soot *... 

.4«S 

044» 

Forward 

.4715 

04725 



ore 

Soof ... 

. 411 

9 412 

ftirward 

W 

9 49 


their. tines collect leaves and 
other debris into a bundle 
that can be lifted. In effect, 
according to the patent, the 
arms and tine assemblies 
serve as a pair of hands, and 
their collected burden can be 
dropped into an ash can. 

* 

Cottonseed Processor 

A new method of process- 
ing cottonseed, patented this 
week for the department of 
Agriculture, is described as 
producing an edible high -pro- 
tein flour eminently suited 
for human consumption. 

In Patent 3,972,861 Homer 
K. Gardner Jr. and three co- 
inventors in the depart- 
ment’s southern research 
center at New Orleans report 
that the product is essential- 
ly free of gossypo], oil and 
hulls. Gossypol is a toxic 
phenolic pigment The con- 
oentrate is referred to as "of 
a quality and purity, with 
respect to its protein con- 
tent, that have not hitherto 
been possible of attainment 
by contemporary processing 
methods." , 

Several steps are included, 
—drying the material, milling 
it with special equipment, 
putting it as a slurry through 
a "liquid cyclone,” and final- 
ly grinding the cake. No li- 
cense has yet been granted 
under the patent. 

- St 

Toy Body Balloons 

James F. Cox Jr. of River 
Forest. Ill, was given Patent 
3.972,526 this week for in- 
flatable body balloons that 
children can wear. The bal- 
loons enable their wearers to 
bounce or roll about while 
playing outdoors. 


Note: Not every stock will always perform in accor- 
dance with its rank. But it is a fact that favorably 
ranked stocks, as a group, have outperformed poor- 
ly ranked stocks with remarkable consistency since 
the ranking system was introduced in 1B65. 

While past performance can never guarantee future 
success, this record of more titan a decade of 
successful discrimination strongly suggests that you 
can tilt the Investment probabilities in your favor by 
using the Value Line ranks. 


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your Value Line binder.) 


400 STOCKS TO AVOID NOW 

The ranks are designed to measure probabilities. 
We expect higher-ranked stocks to go up more in a 
rising market— or- down lass in a market drop— than 
lower-ranked stocks. And conversely... 

We expect the 400 stocks ranked 4 or 5 tor Per- 
formance to go DOWN MORE or UP LESS, on 
average, than the 1200 others within the 12 
months directly ahead. 


EVERY WEEK a new SELECTION & OPINION sec- 
tion (8 pages)... with a detailed analysis of an 
Especially Recommended Stock— plus d wealth of 
investment background including the Value Line 
Composite Average ol more than 1600 stocks. 


Pm. dost 
872 e KM 
S05 e HU 


za o 


2» I 
a»tt« 


A&5 

4715 


04430 

04718 


To get a copy of a patent 
send the number and 50 
cents to the Patent and 
Trademark Office, Washing- 
ton. D. C. 20231. Design pat- 
ents are 20 cents each. 


424 


0 409 
9 425 


COUNTRY FUN FOR KIDS 
GIVE FRESH AIR FUND 


The 400 stocks currently ranked unfavorably (Value 
Line June 25) include some very big names. Just a 
tow of them are AMERICAN BROADCASTING, AL- 
COA, ASA LTD, FAIRCHILD CAMERA, INLAND 
STEEL, KENNECOTT, INT’L HARVESTER, COPPER 
RANGE, SEARS ROEBUCK. (This may show why 
you shouldn't confuse the excellence of a company 
with the current timeliness of a commitment in the 
stock.) 


PLUS THIS $45 BONUS . . . Value Line's complete 
1900-page Investors Reference Service (sold sep- 
arately for §45), with our latest full-page reports on 
all stocks under review— fully Indexed for your im- 
mediate reference. 


MONEY BACK GUARANTEE 

You take no risk accepting this special offer. If you 
are not completely satisfied with the Value Lir/j 
Survey, just return the material you have receivdj 
within 30 days for a lull refund of your fee. 

To accept this invitation, simply fill in and mail the 
attached coupon today. 


LOOKING FOR PERFORMANCE? 

Even if your primary objective is yield, or safety, or 
long-term appreciation, we suggest you stay away 
from stocks currently ranked 4 or 5 by Value Line for 
Next-12-Months Performance. 


| The Value Line Investment Survey | 

ARNOLD BERNHARD & CO.. INC. • 5 EAST 
44lh STREET ■ NEW YORK, N.Y. 10017 


And, of course, If superior relative price 'action is 
what interests you most, then we suggest you give 
special attention to the 100 stocks currently ranked 1 
(Highest) by Value Line for ProbBbfe Market Per- 
formance In the Next 12 Months. 


UPDATED EVERY WEEK 

Every week-for EACH of 1600 stocks-The Value 
Line Investment Survey in Hs Summary o' Advices 
and Index presents the up-to-date ... 

a) Rank lor Relative Probable Price Performance in 
th9 Next 12 Months-ranging from 1 (Highest) 
down to 5 (Lowest). 

b) Rank for Investment Safety (from 1 down to 5). 

c) Estimated Yield in the Next 12 Months— (100 
stocks offer yields of 8.8Ya and up-Value Line 
June 25.) 

d) Estimated Appreciation Potentiality in the Next 3 
to 5 Years— showing the future “target” price 
range and the percentage price change indicated. 
(100 stocks are in the 230% to 590% range— Value 
Line June 25.) 

e) Current price and P/E. plus estimated annual 
earnings and dividends in current 12 months. Also 
the stock's Beta. 

f) Very latest available quarterly earnings results 
and dividends, together with year-eariier com- 
parisons. 

In addition, each of the 1600 stocks is the subject of 
a comprehensive new fuff-page Rating & Report at 
least once every three months— including 23 series 
of vital financial and operating statistics going back 
10 years and estimated 3 to 5 years into the future. 


□Begin my special 10-week trial to The 
Value Line Survey (limited once to any 
household every two years) and send me 
the Investors Reference Service end the 
booklet "Investing in Common Stocks" as 
a bonus. My check or money order for 
S29 is enclosed. (Trial subscriptions must 
be accompanied by payment) 

□ I prefer one year (52 weeks) of Value Line, 
plus the bonus. Investors Reference Ser- 
vice and the booklet, "Investing in Com- 
mon Stocks" for $285. (There are no re- 
strictions with this offer.) 

□ Payment enclosed □ Bill me for $285 
GUARANTEE; If dissatisfied for any reason, 1 
may return the material within 30 days for a 
full refund of the fee I have paid. 4 rw 


SIGNATURE 


NAME (please print) 


ADDRESS 


APT. NO. 


CITY STATE ZIP 

Not assignable without subscriber^ con- 
sent Foreign rates on -Kouest, Subscription 
fees are fully tax-dedocQDfe. (NY residents 
add applicable sales tax.) 




vV ■- .. 


I 





■ V”. r*r_ T.^ 

. JAV- 1 '- -- ■ — r. — . - 




““ * ‘ iVr • '• -i 


TOE JNTEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY; AUGUST 7, 1976 ‘ : 

Consolidated Trading for New York Stock Exchange^ssties 


. • ■■■ 




177* Stocks and Div. Sates Net P 1976 Stocks and Div.' Sale* . Ml 

High Lw m Dtotare P/EMh High Luw Last Cbg Hi/ Law In Dalian P/E 100's High Lew Last Chg 


m* Stocks and Div. Sales Net 1776 stocks and ttv. Sain- ■ . . N«* 

High low in Oollars P/E 100*3 High Lew Last Chg High uw in Doflare P/E 100's High Low Last Chg 


IS 75* Con Pew or * .. 
9% 5% ConfAJr Un .. 


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53 

52% 

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26 19* Draw .95 9 10 23 27% 22% - % 

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63 59 duPnt p(4J0 


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29% 26% Duke pt ZW 


S 84 84 84 + % 

Z210 97* 97 97*+ 2% 

*80 90* 89 90*+ 1 

8 29 29 29 


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36 24% DuqL pf Z31 .. 7800 25% 25% 25%+ % 

30 36% DuqL «Z7S ..22280 29 a* 29 + % 

84 78 Dual pf 7 JO .. 2190 80 SO 80 

• 12 7* Dymoin JO 10 22 9% 9 9Vfc+ % 

E—F— G — H 

19% 13%EG*G .14 1* 59* 18% 18% 11% - * 

5% 3% EMILt .19e 13 48 4% 4 4%+ % 

43* 21% ESvstems 1 9 22 40 39* 39* - * 

39% 25% EagteP 1.16 9 13 35% 35* 35%+ * 

22% 16* EascoCfl JO 6 18 17% 17* 17% + % 

1114 4% EaslAJr Lin .. 242 10% 10 10% 

41% 23% EutGsF JO 8 82 39* 38% 38% - * 

26* 26 EtStGF wi .. 4 26% 26% 26% - * 

16% 14% EastUH 1J0 I 15 15% 15% 15% 

13R. 92% EasKd 1J6a Z4 1384 95% 93 94%- % 

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21% 16% EckdNC J2 9 37 16* 16% 16*+ % 

54* 45% Edlsaro 1.72 8 3 48* 48% 4»* 

20% 9* Edwnta 40a 4 3 14% ■ i», 13%- v. 

15* II* El Paso 1.10 I 208 15% 14% 15 + % 

S% 2 Elect Assoc 14 30 2% 2* 2* 

1 16% 11% EDS .60 13 211 15% 14% 13* + * 

' 3% 1% ElMem Mg 1 M 3 2% 3 

9% 5 EMM Of lk .. 3 8% 1% S%+ % 

38% 15% EfglnN ,20e 12 14 36 36 36 - % 

8% 4% Eltxfr Ind 16 53 7% 7% 7*- % 

31 25% ElfraCp 1.16 9 111 a 29% 29%- % 

41% 31 EmerEt .MX 191 37% 36% 37*+ % 

50% a Emery 1JD 24 127 40% 40* 40*- % 

15 I* Emery In JO 13 • 13* 13% 13% 

37 a* Emhart 1 JO I 59 35% 35* 35% - * 

15% 13% EmpOE U6 11 8 14% 14% 14% 

6* 4% Em 4JW J7 .. 2300 5% 5% 5%+% 

6* 5 EmD 5ot JO .. HO 5* 5* 5* 

16 11 EmpGflS .23 A 34 13% 13% 13% 

37% 22% EngthdM 1 9 116 34* 34 34*- % 

t 5* EmisB .32 5 39 6* 6% 6%+ % 

27* 21* Enserdi 1.72 10 96 26 25% 26 + % 

32* 21% Entox 1.20 7 16 30% 30 30 - % 1 

34% 17* Envrlcc ,10e 13 50 34% 34% 34*+ % 

29 21% Equifax 2 8 5 23% 23% 23% - % 

11% 9* Equimrlc M 7 • 3 11* 11* 11* 

33% 29% EouHGs 2.60 6 8 32% 32% 32%+ % 

22* 17* EqutLf Z29e 11 24 21% 21* 21*- % 

42 30* Esmark 1J2 6 460 32% 31% 32 + * 

8% 4% Esquire .161 37 2 6* 6* 6* + Vk 

10 5% Esterline J6 9 65 8% 8% 8%+ % 

49* 29% Ethyl 1J0 6 13 39% 39% 39% - % 

61% 39* Ethyl pf3J0 .. 2 51* 51* 51*+ % 

11% 5 Evans Prod I 135 10* ID% 10%- % 

22% 14% ExCelO 1.10 7 5 20% 20% 20%- * 

20* II EXClsr 1.78e .. 9 19* 19% 19*+ % 

5S 52 Exxon 9 TOT 54% SJVi 54*- * 

27% .19% FMC 1 7 365 25% 25 25% - % 

39* 31* FMC pf 225 .. 5 36* 36 36-* 

*% 5% Fabrge JO 9 68 7% 7* 7% 

11% 8% FabrlCtr .12 7 6 9* 9% 9*+ * 

9% 5 Facet Efttrp 11 52 5% 5% 5% 

53* 36% FairCam .80 34 191 48% 45% 46*+ % 

11* CVa Falrlnd JO 14 40 10* 10 10 - % 

17 II* FBlrmtF .68 8 4 12% 12% 12% 

7% 5% FarWst Fnl 8 15 6% 6% A%+ % 

13* 5% Farah Mtg .. 44 e 5% 5%- % 

9% 4 Feeders Cp .. 69 7* 7 7*+ % 

31* 22% FedrlCo MO 4 20 26* 24 26 - % 

25 '12* FedMooul IJOa 13 42 24% 24% 24%+ % 

16% 13* FadNMt JS 6 399 14% 14% 14* 

39* 24 FedPap MO 5 14 38* 38 38*+ % 

24% 16% FPsO pf IJO .. XI 23* 23* 21* 

15 10% FSignl ,60a 6 6 14* 14% 14* 

60 42* FedDSt 1J6 12 581 42* 42 42%+ % 

36 21* Ferro 1.10 S 6 31% 31% 31% 

17* 8% Flbrebd Co .. 48 12% 12* 12*- % 

5% 3% FldFIn J4e 5 27 4% 4* 4*- % 

22% 15 FteWcrMH 15 41 17% 17% 17% 

11% 7% FI HnH CD 4 7 8 7* 8 

14% 9* FtoSanB .28 5 44 14* 14* 14*+ % 

15% 9% FWFed .25r 5 13 13% 13* 13* 

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17* 12* FstChar Jit 7 221 15% U* 14*- * 

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30 22* FtfNBO 148 9 121 26% 36 26%- % 

17% 14% FslPe 1J12S 63 15V, 15% IS* 

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6* 4% FstVaBk J5 7 41 5% 5% 5%+ % 

23 17* FIMsOj 1.76 9 12 22* 22* 32* 

33% 23% FIsdiM 1.10 9 44 29* 2V* 22*+ W 

13 a* FtShFdS JO 6 -42 10* »% 10% 

17% 9* FbhrSd Jl 8 48 16% 15* 15*- % 

20* 14 FleetErrt JO 19 226 M* 16* 16%- % 

18% 13* Fleming JO I 6 15% IS* 15%+ % 

12% 8* FtedVan JO 27 35 11* 11% 11* 

59* M FHntkot LW 9 36 B 11% 19 + % 

60 50* Flfo Of A 4 JO .. ZlO 58% 50% 58%+ % 

24% 16* FI»E Coast 9 2 20* 20% 20*+ % 

18 U* Fla Gas 1 7 21 16* 16% M*+ % 

28% 20* FlaPWL 1J6 7 452 24* 34% 24*+ *' 

30* 25% FllPOW ZlO 7 290 28* 28% 28%+ * 

29* 19% FWStl 1J0 7 I 22 21* 22 + % 

44% 30 nuorCO JB 12 141 43% 42% 42%-. % 

6% 4% FdFalr JO ' 35 5% 5* 5% 

14% 1BVI FooteCB .90 7 6 13% 13% 13% 

60% 43* FordM 3JD 8 713 55% 56* 56*- % 

18% 13% ForMcK 1 7 55 15* IS* 15*+ * 

29% 23% FMK Of MO .. 6 25* 2* 25*+ % 

15* 13% FtDear 1J4 .. 51 14* 14 14*+ * 

40* 28% FtHowP M 10 37 30* 30* 30*- * 

36* 21% FOSWh 1.10b 8 148 34% 34* 34*- % 

47* 27% Foxborg JO 12 156 46* 45% 45% - 1 

35* 23* FmfclnM .70 13 126 33% 33* 33% - K 

28% 21% FreeoM 1.60 13 34 27% 27* 27% 

29 18* Fruetll MO I 38 26% 26* 26*- % 

9% 4% Fuqua lnd.Me .. 26 8* 8* 8%+ % 

B* GAFCp JO 9 81 15* 15 15%+ % 

22* 15% GAFpf 1.20 .. 56 20* 20% 2D*+ * 

32* 25’A GATX 1.80 9 55 28* 27* 28*+ Vi 


: 44* 

36% GATX ptZ50 .. 

1 

37 

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15 

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29% 21* GamSk MO 5 5 27% 77* 27*+ * 

29* 19* Gams of MB .. 4 29% 29% 29%+ % 

40% 32* Gannett .72 19 253 36* 36* 36% - % 

13% 11% GapSfrs 11 158 14 13% !3*+ * 

T 23* GardOen .76 15 89 34* 34* 26*- * 

16* 11% Garflnk 1.04 ? 6 15* 15* 15*- * 


189* 152 GettyOil 3e 12 31 175% 

l7+i 16* GeflO. ptlJO .. 2 17 

12* 10* GiantPC .88 • 4 11* 

9 7Vi Gttr Fin 6 45 8* 

11% 5* GtddLew .40 6 52 8 

14% 9% GlfftOHIII .64 V 12 13* 

38* 28* Gillette IJQ 11 111 31* 

IS 9* Gina Inc 6 53 11% 

14* 6* GleuW .lie .. 9 11% 

11% TV, Global Mac 21 28 8% 

32* 20* GtobeUn la 4 32 21% 

18% 11% GtidWl Fin 5 9 15* 

19* 13% GoWW pt.TI .. 2 16* 

29* IS Goodrh 1.12 18 266 28* 

25* 20% Goodvr 1.10 11 411 22* 

14* 9* GorMA -32 5 2 11* 

39* 26* Gouldln 1J6 9 54 38* 

GouM Wt .. 1 25* 

29 19* Gould plIJS .. 9 26% 

33* 24* Grace LTD t 189 27* 

34% 24* Grainger J6 19 15 32 

15* 12* Grand un if 7 14% 

17* 12* Granitvl JO 5 13 14% 

19* 13* GravDrg JO 5 34 15 

15* 1M GIAflPac 26 138 13* 

24% 18* GtLkD 1.20a 6' 2 21 

34* 28% GtMorNek II 73 29% 


15* 12* Grand Un II 7 U% 
17* 12* Granitvl JO 5 13 14% 

19* 13* GravDrg JO 5 34 15 

15* 10* GIAflPac 26 138 13* 

24% 18* GtLkD 1.20a 6' 2 21 

34* 28% GtMorNek II 73 29% 
19* 13* GfWnFln JO 9 129 17* 

31% 21* GtWest Unit 2 8 24* 

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FUE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7 , 1976 




SUGAR FUTURES 
CONTINUE DOWN 


October Contract Falls to 
1 1 .55c a Pound — Coffee Up 


New York Stock ExchangeBond Trading 


WORLD BANK 


ln!Bfc6*S77M M 9L2S 98JS 90JS+ .1 


FRIDAY, AUGUST & 1976 

UAGoirt. OWWDWIt. 


Dev'S Safes UU.13DX00 

Thursday.. . al5J2P,000 

Ye*- to Date S?,9MUOO 6X259,737,000 

1975 17,491 .000 4X349,074400 

a— Includes International Bank Bonds 


S1JOJOO SUJOO.OQ0 

260000 15*880000 

30558.900 X29&265.90O 

2X436400 MBMOMMB 


t: • 

3f*' 

• "» nr •. • .■ 

;jS ; 4 "! ... 

M ■ ■ 

- 1 '-N 

: ■* ?. , . 


•**■«=* r. , ;• 

*'■ 

. ^ « *• 

;-ri- T“ 


*■ 

*7P 2J0ft 2JI%1W 
V W% X86 

1 '• 190 X87% 2JT 

0‘ • . OATS 

:•;« JAS 1A3 1-ff 

■ ‘ v"^ iS T# % 

' SOYBEANS 
J 6J4 4:12 Ul, 
; - r a&VjJM 6W 

r 1 . r ,7 &3S 422 435. 

. * -3% fcJ2 430 4-43 

■ ! ‘. r EE 435 L48 

’ ■ V .‘S SOYBEAN Oil. • 

• .• "US 19.75 T 9M IM! 

’ ■ wo WJO 1MD 19. £ 

19.95 19.® 19M 
...-.'ASS 20.15 19.75 IMS 

- *■ -)» 2421 lMf-IMf 

2L30 20.05 2LK 
... .,..15 2IUS 20.15 29-15 
f ,.,i30 2135 30.15 20.15 
r . 'DYBEAM MEAL 

C'-il 1IU» 177.50 1B04M 
, < -.JO lift* 17M0 11470 
. . . JO 182J0 179.00 18X00 

•• .-:j» iwjb hum ibxso 

JO 185.00 Ml JB 184.00 

• . ,-BO 115 JO 1B2JK) 185 JO 

- .. .JO 11450 lSLOO 186JD 

■jOD 187.00 18X50 WJ» 
■ YUS CITY WHEAT 

■ : : l 6 ig ■ 55 ‘ 

3J4% 

.. 1 SUGAR 
porfjacf No. 12 

- 12.10a. 

CoofrKJ No* 21 
‘ -ilUS 11.10 11.12 
V.11J0 11.50 11 JS 

- -^UL» 12.20 B12J6 

- i?fl 1X35 1X60 

- . -■ . KJZ 1X50 1X51 

- . ' .1240 12.66 12-60 

: 1250 1X61 12.® 

- 1250 1273 42J& 


' =*■ *-t 


_ 2 * ■* . 


^ -S, „ 

L>< - H' r 

I’-*' • "~i * 

ft* ,tJ 

c-.-t. - r , 

t 4 Tt - 

ST "Hi c 
r ■*? - 7J- t. 
*■ 


I.*' : .!" 

SS- r- 


V ' f 

5 ■ 


>■ v. •' v 

- • r ^ 


COCOA 

■r High Lav Cfoso 
. . 9425 92JO 9425s 

- 92.90 . 88.90 92Jfe 
' 09.70 0*70 09J5S 
.' 87.00 8125 8675$ 
' 8400 ffiU® 83.80s 

- 81J0 SIJO 8I.1& 
77 JO 7525 77JQS 


FROZEN 
67,10 
57 JO. 
5460 

:s?J7 
-5&3S 
. .54* 
IBS 1905; 

BJfil 

a i2Wj 


By ELIZABETH M. FOWLER 
Sugar futures prices con- 


S ^UD . 4410 Open Low don Pm. ^UZ A B E Ili M. FOWLER 

® Stf 57-15 Sep 149 JO 150.95 149J0 15400 -14&00 SURflT futures nrirK rnn. 

S5 S4J5 B5475 Dec 1*1 JO Mtflfi MOJO Ml JS 139.98 i>u 6 ar ^uluics pnCCS COn- 

S “?- 1D Mar U490 13775 134*0 13460 13400 tinned to decline veslerdav and 

10 51 JO 85460 May in 0 (1 nrjs 13&JB 813440 1B.90 jpeawcuay ana 

S mHL* wS° *i 132M u7 jo 13450 13460 U34O0 coffee pnees continued to rise, 
i. Mara 252 j smk: ml M tmvding with old news” ac- 

x™*- W» wSXi«L cording to one commodity ex- 

JW» 93f Ads , I VC SECB CATTIS Dert. 


A-AIW7 n— N otbImI Am 

„ POTATOES Da 

«-Y. MKCkafRfl EbOimm Dec 

.Omb HWi Low Cto» frww. FA 
UC 5.11 5JU 5,94 s 11 Apr 

U* &1° &U 4K M Jm 

M-79 6 J3 AM 

^0 • 7J0 7M JM 7jR £ 


LIVE BEEF CATTLE pert. 

37 JS .3475 37 JO 37J9 33305 October SUgRT On N&W 

£2 SJ aS Yq * Coffee and Sugar £ 

4455 4375 *uo 63 jo 63J0 change closed at 11.55 cents a 
SS ££ SSS poundT down from ll.SB^e 


CORPORATION BONDS 


AT04HS87 CW 37 59 58% 55% - Ml ' Aw 

AddM9%9510J 5 88% 88% 88 %- % Aui 

AteR 3W7T .. 3 106% 106% 106% Am 

A laP 953000 9J » 94% W% 96% E5rS?T 

AloFOTBjWW 5 81 B8 0-1% Bend> Y^i 

AMP 7Eo029J 3 83% 83% 13% 

A toP MOB 9 J 17 93 91ft 93 + % CxP 7JSs83 7.7 

AlaP 9VoO(94 79 99ft 99% 99% - % FMC 61692 Cv 

AI«P WUS 1B.1 IS IOTA 107% 107% 

AMP M%05 TO. 21 104% 101% 106% 

Alaska 6S96 ev 5 74 74 74 +1 , ». 

AlwnSVsW cv 5 51% 54ft 54ft- % | FeddrSUMlLl 
AIM* 11%94cv 6 129 129 129 
AIH5U S%87 cw 60 a 60% 62 + % I FedSt 7W0 42 
Alcoa Stortl c* 77109% 107% WB%+ % I Hrcst3%773J 


August 5 

August* 


BOND I5SUES TRADED 
Issues Advances Declines 


763 294 235 

000 317 266 

830 385 212 


„ PLATINUM 6801 

'York Mercantile D ed UM e 72. 

L20 156 JO 15480 TJ4TO 157,90 

loo loin I P'S mo |S^e open BMb low doe Prw. °f Colombian coffee earlier in 

S !££! Igg 1SS !gs iS SS SSJ35S %$, J* 

imjfaSs oct 3 ? js «.mi 39 js »jj w 9 jo meirt Thursday that drought- 

„ palladium »<w 40.05 40.M am ».« stricken sugar beets were ex- 

York MBKaaHla EtdnoM Mar 62J0 42J8b*2J0 42JB 4i6D :r*TjT M 

ub 69JK 49.00 «3o 49 jjj Apt *1250*175 *175 42JB a*i25 peoted to yield more sugar than 

m 2-00 48-14 so.* 50 JO War *275 ojs 42M J42M4250 anticipated in France. 

L2S 5170 4« an raj™ jtiq Salas: Aus 22; Sep Tr Oct 68; Now 24; » JT ... 

us 58m ba o 59 jo 52oo March i; Awfi 0; M*r i. Coffee prices have been bol- 

flfradl Opu IntefBSli Aw 99 1 Sap 133; Oct stpr pH nftfClltlv hv fpnnrfc fAvaf 

SllMT Coins (la Dollars) 1M2; How 372; March *1; Awn 30; May ~S re ^” s 

York Mcrantile BrdMni w. Brazil bought coffee from SaJ- 

J2 2iQ2B 2780 3JI9 3JC0 LIVE HOGS Vftd rtr In nast urnks Rrayil lian 

s is i§£ as i?s & ss as .as as ss 

SJS £8! m SS SS SS £S SS 5S ““ y^> d * » Sve 

■■twMs aw 3440 36J5 -3400 Z6JB 3478 like taking coals to Newcastle 

- - -°>FPEg _ . Jan 3SA5 3S.9Sb3S.lS 3407 *38.70 he£BUi(A Brarfl is Who ro „u., 

Yortc commodity Exetanoa joj a*on toad w.w 3S.50 *3*,85 r t:t3tuse OT9zn is Lae worlds 

teen Hioh Low ctnse Prer. Iauo Sis 37.2 37 . 1 s * 37 .u * 37 js largest coffee producer. How- 

** ever, Brazil wants to prop 
Pf£ vmrid coffee prices at current 
mi /z.w 72.ua iuu nj» 147- Aoy 45. July high levels. K uses the coffee 

S SS SS SS SS ' ~,!£5>.»K l lfjL. O W tome cOMumption 

5 ?ss as ?ss ^ i~ **. ,a °w» «>«» •» 

imaw W1B. • Aog 4UB 6142 41J5 M.10 41.17 « PnCCS. 

5fo 39-k 3?^ ». 2 S Typical midsummer peace 

cru p Hoy 37.80 37J0 37 JO 37.78 37J5 .amIoJ jj.. — , ■ .-jl. 

York connedHy &a*im mb 39 jo 39 jo 39.15 39.M 39.30 seraea over tne gram and soy- 

b fn»r ecmcB amirads Fah 3Bjo 3490 3485 348s 3L&S bean markets yesterday marked 

•w HWh MQn Piw. Mar 39JO 3960 39. -a JIAO 39 JO 

m 11240 ii2^ii^S ioijo b-Btd; »Admi; h-NomiMi. °y few price changes and low 

a 113 jo 11240 moos ii2 « lumber volume. November sov beans 

» 1MJ0 113JQ U3J0ST13J0 Chicaeo Mwcardllo Eketonoo rlnnmt at Vi n hneh^f .. n a 

0 115.10 11460 115.00s 114 JO Ow HWTl Low Close Prey. C10S j ea ® DUSnel, Up 4 

to n6jo ii6jM 11430s U5.90 Sop 759.00 162J0 15480 7 4i jo 158J0 cents. Eady m July the same 

a TT7JO T17JB 117 JOs 117 JO Nov 156.00 159 JO 155.90 159 JO 155-40 rnntTft<*f- nrnc nwwj of ttv *771/ 

o 121 jo 121.00 i2i.7Qs 121 jd Jon i«jo 16290 15460 162J0 15440 connacL was paced at $7.77%. 

star 1KL50 168.10 16220 167 jo 16210 September corn closed at 

51LVER (5iOOD tram) ^Jates ^Stp 333; Hov 758. J«i 380 ■ $2.78 1^, off 1% CCHtS a bushel, 

ciow Prey, own 1W2? ,729; Un while September wheat ended 

St£ £3 ; piwoo at *3.301/,. off about 5 cants. 

429J& 42450 cwcw Board of Trod* Floor brokers reported that 

43470s <35 ia Sep ^Soo T^o mw fsLTO iSjo aettvity invoived 

44uos 440 jo Nw issix) i56Jo 154 jo 155.00 issjD traders setting them positions 

466 JOs 445 JO Jan 156JB 1S7J0 156-50 15450 15480 ^ Mrmdav a^vrivafp 

6si jas <50 jo Mir 158J6 15480 157 jo 15450 i5B.oo Decause o« iwonoay a private 

459 JOS 45BJD May 160.00 16OJ0 15480 740.00 159 JO CTOp report Will be ISSUed b\ 

s» 161 jd HiIm tIo!m T 62 M iJlS Conrad Leslie, a • well-known 

■ . . . ■ — . i .jM - .— crop analyst, mid it wifl be the 

first this season to estimate in 

Other U.S. Stock Exchanges KJiS 

° precede the Department of 

1WEST Fnday, August 6, 1 976 ^ Hiafi Low aon Ore. AgncuJture's report due on Aug. 

Hu Low close au- e _ _ _ JN* mo uoBCan os 7% ^7% 7 %-% 12. The Monday report, as one . 

■ 15 % 15 % i 5 %+% at ** hwi low don Ota M z«Kaa Core u% i7% I7% - * trader said, “will give us a 

;SS i ^ boston h^e on the^ket before the 

12 12 12 — % 72400 GfBosfn wt ft 13-16 13-16— 1-16 Solos Slock . Htoh Low Dose On. Government report- 

r;:.,-.- stbo Ire lubat % % *+i- 16 }M " r E»p imi ift ift ift- % Beef cattle prices on the Chi- 

kC F C . . Nd pf 2 %. 2 % 2%+ft M eS» af St St St “5° Mercantile Exchange 

Mali lovObhQm. *oi Mneiiao pm i .15-16 15-16-1.16 iooo eik iussUk 2 5-i6 2 i-i6 2 W6^i-i6 moved up amid so me belief 
a 3 Si-% 3E3?« tom, rei^jwoojw that price. might have 

. .A SS HSSL PHILADELPHIA 


»» " rt ‘ ***■•»■ to the case of sugar the old 
FEEQpt cattle news has been a low-priced sale 


oua 

6930 

TO.IO 

69 JO 

69 JOs. 

5op 

69 JO 

78L70 

6920 

69 JOs 

Oct 

7L50 

70JD 

7020 

7SJ0s 

Dec 

71.® 

7X50 

71 .40 

71 Jte 

tan 

7100 

7X90 

72.00 

7X3fc 

Mar 

2X40 

7L4D 

7X30 

7340$ 

lAoy 

7440 

7530 

74JO 

74J0s 

Jut 

Z5J0 

76.10 

7SJB 

7$J0s 

Sea 

7S.10 

76J0 

7410 

76.10s 


UVE NOGS 
08 6135 

* t MM 

oc 37 J5 

efc 37.75 

or 36.40 

fR 38 AS 

ll 28-90 

K 37J5 

Sales: An 986; 


Opbo Interest: 1 


ICED BROILERS 


(mated 7,918. 


BQWte YlelB S1A» HMl Law Lost CHofc . Batch Yield SiaOOHWi Low L«1 

Exp 7 JSs83 7.7 15 1M 99% 188 * % Nwsh 7VW44B 46 87% 85% 85% 

FMC 41692 Cv 7 72% 72% 72%+ % NwnBI 7ft 11 45 J 93% 92% «% 

Patedi 4%92 cv 10 59 58% 59 -T NwnBI lflsM 9. 2D 111% *11% 111% 

FMrFd 9596 cv 15 105% K 14% MSft+ % 

Famlv 5s*l 7.8 6 63ft 63ft 63ft 

Feddr 8ft94 1L1 1 80 80 80 

FetSJ 4%s96cv W 77 77 77 - % 

FedSt 7%ta 42 1 87% 87% 87%+% 

Hrest 3%77 3J 3 97 97 97 


SCG485s»S 9. 5 98% 98% 98% 

SNET8%0B8J 25 93% 92% 92ft- % 
SNET9%109J 15 105 105 105 + Ik 

SPacO 41677 4J 2 99% 99% 99% 

SPac5%s836A S 82% 82% C% , 

SoRvC *%88 6.9 5 87 87 G 

SodF 10VW49J 28 106ft 104ft 106ft+ ft 
SW0T 8%07 46 36 101% 101% 101%+ % 
SwBT Aftll 8J 3 82% 82% 82%-lft 

1 SwBT 7%12 8.4 10 8B 88 88 

SwBT 7%13 43 15 91% 91% 91%+ % 
SwBT 9%14 44 9 97% 97% 97%-l%« 

SWB9JM1547 7 106 106 106 


SwBT 8%14 £L4 
SwB 905*15 8-7 


-JT. sooty (eM cv 12122 121ft 121%- ft 

KW5h7%94&8 46 87% 85% 85% -1% Spied 5S87 7A 3 67% 67% 67% +1 

NwnBI 7ft 11 45 J 93% 92% 92% -1 Sprag4%92 cv 5 50 50 SO 

NwnBI 10514 9. 2D 111% 111% 111%+ % Smtfe «S85 4 27 100ft 100% 100%+ ft 

18 WOft WOft lC0ft+ ft SOCaJ 5K927.3 5 80 79 79-1 


77 108% 107% MRS + % Hrest 3%77 3J 3 97 97 97 

Alcoa 9s9S 48 9 101% W 102% - ft FotCm 7%0* 10J 4 75% 75% 75U-1% 

AMAX 8s86 BJ 3 97ft 97ft 97ft- ft Pstlnti 9s8347 1 103% TD3% M3%+ % 

AMAX 8%B4 44 1 101 W 101 - ft PsNBo6ft79 6Jl 3 97 97 97 - 

AFoP6As877.1 20 dB 67ft 68 „ .. FsNfio6%80 7. 2 97 97 97 ... 

AForP 5069.3 11 54 53ft 54 fteNBas Bs82 1 IS M0% 100% 100%... 

AAjrBlflsMcv 5 84 86 86 +1% FsPem7s93cv 16 62 62 62 .. 

AAirl 4US92CV 31 54% 54 54%+% PtUnFUTsOlev .5 83% 82ft 82% - 

AAHUl 11S8S IBS H 104ft 104ft HMft+ ft FWIN 6Js80 72 10 95 . 95 95 +1 

A8nvJ9ft?9 9. • $ 106% W6% M6%+ % FtedV(HW7cv U 64' 64 64 .. 

ABmd 8VWSL1 75 100% 100% 100% FTPLt 10K81 9.9 60 108% 108% 108%- 1 


Ml 

101 

- % 

FsNBo 6*79 (LB 

3 

97 

97 

9t 

67* 

dB 

TT e- 

FsNBoeftfiO 7. 

2 

97 

97 

97 

Oft 

54 


FsNBasBsD L 

15 UOft 100ft 100ft 

16 

•6 

+1% 

FjPhvj 7s93cv 

18 

6? 

fi2 

67 

54 

54%+ * 

FtUnRITsOl cv 

5 

83% 

82% 

82% 


ABmdBVUSU 75 100% 100% 108% 

ACan 3%S81 5.7 2 65ft fift 65ft + ft 
- ACeM 6%91 CV 2 43ft 43ft 43ft+ ft 

AEXC SVisSS 8J 5 103 T03 103 

AHebt4%92<V 4 ID ID ID 43 
A Hoist 5%93 CV 73 85% 85 85% +1% 

AHOSD 5%99 CV 5 124 124 124 - ft 


108% FTPLt 10ft81 9.9 40 108% 108% 108% - ft 

65ft + ft R8PL9VW447 5 104% NMft M6ft+ % 

43ft+ ft Ford 7% 77 72 79 181 1« 101 

TtO FcrdUSMBZA 29 700% 100% 100%- %. 

ID 43 Ford 1^94 46 10 107 107 107 + ft 

85% +1% FrtC BWOA 8.7 15 Wl% 101ft 101%- ft 

124 - ft FttC8ft90N 8.7 38 101ft 101ft 10T%+ %r 


AMedes Ss97 CV « 55ft 55% 55ft -1% FnJCBftOl U 18 D 97 97 - ft 

AnUAOf 6S88 CV 11 62% 62% 62% FrdC6ft78 4.9 10 99ft 99ft 99ft+ ft 

Am$tr«W09J 4 103 NSft 103 + ft FrdC4ftft cv 35 » 76 76 - ft 


AmStrwwm 4103 naftios +ft 
ATTZMsn 12 35 16 85ft 86 + ft 

ATT4ftseS SJ 66 79 7Bft T9 + ft 

ATTAHsBSe .. .15 79% 79% 79%+ M 
ATT 3fts90 5J 25 66ft 66 06 - ft 


BSft 86 + ft FrdC4ft98 Cv 18 83 82% 82ft- ft 

7B% 79 +V» FrCC 7%79 73 -IS 99ft 99ft 99ft 

79% 79%+ Vi FrCC 71093 8J 4 93 93 93 + ft 

66 66 - ft FrdC 485S8S 46 15 103% 103 103 -1 



5 70% 70% 70%+% StOCal 7S96 7J 28 92 89ft 92 +3 

74 103 102% 102ft- ft SOCa!8%Q58A 10 102% 102% 102% 

14 ID 106% 107 StOMd 6S96 7.5 10 80% 80% 80% 

6 65 64 45 +2ft SOIn6Jfc»6J 95 99 ft 99% 99ft + ft 

4 88ft 88ft 88ft + ft StOlnd 8ft05 43 40 MOft ID 100%+ ft 

3 92ft 92% 92ft StdOh 7As99 8.4 5 90 W 90 ..... 

50 U7ft 107 107 + ft sim sftxno bj s » » w 

5107% 107% 107% - ft StPkg 5%90cv 2 49ft *9ft *9ft-3ft 

1 101% 104% 104% -1% StPadc 6s90 10 J 4 58ft 58% 58ft..... 

5 lim 110ft 110%+ ft StoMut9s80Ua 27 61 6T 61 

13102 101ft 101ft-2 StorBr 4ftfl6 cv 16 76 • 74ft 76 +2 

10 90% 90% 90%+ % Suietsfr 5s93 cv 11 70 69 7D +lft 

5 102ft HBft 102ft+ ft SureshfiftW cv 6 91 90% 90% -1% 

4 17% 87% 87ft- ft 

5 68ft 68ft Mft ... 




5 ttft Mft 68ft ..I IS2 Su. 

5 91 91 n + % TeledV 7S99 9 J 12 72ft 72ft 72ft... „ 

9 Kft 85ft Bft+ft TeledV 10504 10.1 4298ft 98 «ft 

1 *ft 86ft «W.: . Tele* 9596 13J 21 m s 66 ft 67%+ ft 

2 91 91 5 + ft TenQ9 6%97 CV 116% 116ft + ft 

» 107 107 107 - ft H ^ iS?'* - S 

87 103ft 103ft 105ft TemCp 9s7B 8L8. o 102ft KCft 102ft- ft 

5 KIDft 100% 100% Tenlnc 6S796-3 '12 95% 96% 95%:.... 

5 irn 101 101 Teninc 8%9I 45 10 96ft 96ft 96ft+2ft 

50 103% 103 103 . . Teninc 9ftS 9J T 106ft 104ft 106ft + ft 

6 Mft flft 61 ft -Ift TVA9%595T .. 2108ft 108ft 108ft 

»ieM6TOftW3ft+ ft ™7^97BT .. 1 91ft Wft 91%...^ 

5 99ft 99ft 99ft- ft TV 7J5S97C 8.1 W 41 91 91 - ft 

■k lm :5s im * 2 TVA7.«SV7 LI 35 91ft 91 91 - ft 


ATT8%2000 &4 87 104ft 104ft HMft+ % Fntt 81W& 46 10 NQft 103ft 103ft -ift 
ATT47S0C 44 86 lQMk U3ft HBft- ft FoMcK6s94cv M 73 73 73 


ATT 7501 4 14 87% 87ft 87ft Frueti5ft94CV 46 7D 

ATT6ftsJ9 64 65 98ft 979. 98 + ft FruehF 7579 7 J 8 97 

ATT TftaD Ll S V4 Wt 88ft Fuqua 7s8B 9.9 3 701 

ATTL405QSL5 V W4ft T04ft 704ft- ft Fuqua 9ft98 11 J 6 85 

ATT 7*3*2 7.7 77 MOft 100ft 100ft GnATY5ft99<tf 5 72 


16 7D 69ft 69ft- ft 

8 97 97 97 

3 70ft 70ft 70ft 

6 85 85 85 -I 

5 72 72 72 - ft 


ATT8ft507 44 59 lQZft 102ft IQZft - ft GnEl SJ592 6J 3 81% 81% 81%+lft 


Amroc SUM cv 12 62 
Airipx 5ft94 cv 3) 54 
A0CDO 5*816.1 2 94V 


12 62 62 62 .. . 
a 54 S3 S4 .... 
2 Mft 94ft 94ft -2 


GEIGr 7579 7.1 6 99% 99 99%+ ft 

GEIC4658S42 15 104% 104% 104%+Tft 
GECL6S5848J 6 103% 103% 103% 


Arco 430S81 U 46110ft KO HOft+ ft I GFoad 8ftM 46 39 KOft 183% l(Cft+ % 
AlCO Bs82 4 15 100% 100% N»ft+ ft | GH0St75M UJ 6*61% 61 61%+% 


5 99ft 99ft 99ft- ft TV 7J5S97C LI 10 91 VI 91 - ft 

J 101 low Wl + % ™*7« ’ M S S* Sm. S ' S 

2 90ft 90ft ooft + ft TV 7JS596A 8.1 3S 91 90ft 91 + ft 

30 WS% 105ft 105%+ ft JS 21 - S S “ a? 

49 101% 101% 101%- ft JVALI^9L3 M W W 97 - % 

22 42 4104 41% TeSOTO 5 1 A89 CV 35 91 90% 91 +14 

ToxtO 5*977.4 31 77% 77% 77%..... 
Te9(CO7%0142 25.94% 94 94 -1 


72 02 61% 61% 

5 54% 54% 54% + % 

12 SS 54ft 54ft- % 


sep 

SOLD No» 

York Commodify EgDio w j*; 

0 fror oooca andrads 
Wn NUb Low dose Pin. ***r 
S3 11440 11400 11440s 71170 MM 
O 113 JO 1I2J0 113.005 17440 
D 11LOO 173J0 113.8te T13JJ0 
0 115.10 114JD T15.00S 7 TWO 
ffl 116-30 116JM 71630s 175.90 Sop 
• 777 JO T17JD 7 17 JOs 117 JO NOV 
O 721 JO 121.00 121.705 121 .40 Jon 
Mar 
Sates 


Arco Bfts83 42 IS 101ft 701% 701%- ft GHoStllsSacv 7 702 1001 

AmSsM 4 40 700ft 708ft 700%+ ft GninsT4%8Sev 2 76 76 

ArlzP 9fts82 9.1 42 KWft lOfik 104ft + ft Gnlnslr 5s92 CV 1 59% 3K 

Artzp lOftOO 9J 5110 no 110 +ft GMA5S77 5.7 42 98ft 96 

Armr5s84 5.9 6 Mft 84ft B4ft GMA4S39 42 S 92 92 

AshJO 4%93 cv 15 73ft 73ft 73ft- ft GMA5S80 55 6 97% 91! 

ADGC 89U3 8.7 30 101ft 101ft 707ft GMA 4%82 5.5 27 85 8+> 

ASC0 8ft77 45 35 100ft 700ft 700ft GMA4ftS3 5J 5 84 84 

ASCpWriO 93 10 ID 100 TOO ..... GMA4VM6 6. 60 77ft 771 


AsInV 4ft83 49 _ . . .. 

Aslnv 4ft65 63 3 73 73 73 GMA8M77 46 3 102ft 102 702 - ft 

Alta»6%82 142 24 S% 55ft 55%+ % GMA8S93 44 20 96ft 95% 95%- ft 

AtlCEl 9%83 49 I 104ft 104ft 104ft+ ft GMA7MM 43 6 93ft 93ft 93ft + ft 

ANRICh 7578 7. 70 100ft ID IOOft+ ft GMA7V595 4 10 91 91 91+2 

ART 7.7S2000 46 3 89ft 89ft 89ft -2 6MA7V092 8.1 20 88% 88% 88%- ft 

AvcoC 5ft93cv 4 59 ■ SBft 58ft+ ft GMA89W9 46 8 103ft 103ft !Dft+ ft 

AvcoC 7ft93 148 5 69% 69% 69%+ ft GMA8ftsS44 38 103ft 102ft 102ft 


7 702 100ft 102 +2 

2 76 76 76 + ft 

1 59% 59% 59% 

42 98ft 98 98ft 

5 92 92 92 + ft 

6 91% 91% 91%+ft 

27 85 84% 84%..... 

5 84 84 14 

60 77ft 77ft 77ft +1 


I IS ID 99ft 99ft TemSftOSLS 26 104 103 703% -1ft 

12 100 99 99 Tera>Sft0645 168 100ft TOO 100%- ft 

Iran 03 - ft TxPacSMS 41 4 75ft 75ft 75ft- ft 

11 109ft 108ft ID - % TXCo3%63 *A 5 78% 7B% 7B%+ ft 

8 113ft 113% l|3% — % Texfl 4%96 cv 19 40Vi 40 40%..... 

2 Mft Mft «ft .. . ToIEd 7ft02 49 18 M 83 84 +2ft 

M106 706 106 -1 ToIEd 10S82 9J 10 707 JOT WT +1 

yn 107 107 107 + ft TWA 6ft7Bf .. 55 96ft 96ft 96ft..... 

10 102% 102% W2%+ % ™(Afc92 CV 19 40ft 40 «%- ft 

It 03% 03 OTa+ 1 TWA5SM CV 14 49 48ft 49 ..... 


11 93ft 93 93ft +1 

70730 730 130 .... 


10 101ft 101ft 107ft+ ft TWA 1JW6 11. 


TWA 70585 1U 2 ft. 96 . % -7 


TOO ’ 100 ..... 


O 100 100 TOO ..... GMA4VM6 6. 60 77ft 77 ft 77ft +1 

5 76ft 76ft 76ft..... GMA%%88 74 19 85% 84ft 84ft- ft 
3 73 73 73 GMAS%77 46 3 102ft ID 702 - ft 


10 79% 79 7V + % iTrvtr 47595 47 29 100ft 99% 99ft- ft 
ID IMft 106ft 106ft/.. i. (TtlSM 7%80f 16.7 1346ft 46ft 46ft +2% 


X COTTON EXCHANGE 
JWrtrwT No. Z 
77-50 75.99 74.SS 

, 75J5 74.10 74.M 

75.70 74.50 74-SO 

- 7525 7420 7420 
73 JO 73.20 7X70 
6495 6466 86450 
66.10 6480 65-95 


MIDWEST 


425J0S 424.J0 
429 MU 42450 
431.90s 430.83 
436.70s 435.60 Sop 
441J0S 440 JO Nov 
446 JOs 445.48 Jan 
451 JOs 450 JO Mir 
459 JO* 45450 May 
JM 


AvcoF 8ft77 4 8 20101 100ft 100ft- ft GMA8fts86Xl 41100% 100% 100% 

AVCOF7M79J 1 83 83 S3 GMA 8%86N 4 S3 101ft 101ft 101ft + % 

A«oF8fts84^. 20 700% 99% I00ft+1% GMASftsOl 8A 34 ID 101ft ID +% 

B40 4%sV5 8J 2 a 53 52 +7% GM4Q5S85 7.9 6 101ft 101ft 101ft- ft 

B&0 11*77 10.7 3 XO m ID GM 8fts05 42 10 104ft 104ft 104ft 

BalG£ 70s82 9J 15 101% W7% 107%+ ft GPUt tmiao *J 13 104% 7 Mft- 104% s- ft 

BMGEWMS9J 15106% 705% 705% GTME4S9Q 04 5 65 64% 65 

8k NY 6% 94 Cv 5 92ft 92ft 92ft GTe)E5s92 Cv 27 77 71 71 

Banka BftOS 47 25 ID ID ID - % GTME«%96CV 14 H% 88 88 + ft 

BaxL4ft501cv 70 105 ID ID - % GTC 9*20009.2 6 106% 104 106% +3 

BeCtO 5s89 CV 5 82 82 S ..... GTCal 8*96 9.4 5 94 94 94 +2 

BeeCA4%93 Cv 95 02ft 81ft 82ft +1% GWot 8%sW 9. 1 97% 97ft 97ft- ft 

Bck»4fts88cv 30 61M 61ft 61ft + % GaPsc5*96cv 10106 7 05ft 106 

Bolden 8X90 CV 2 704% HM% MM%- % GPc6%30D0cv 20 113 113 n3 - ft 

BdIPfl Sft06 45 13 10) 101 101 + ft GPw 9*2000 0A 15 94 93ft 94 

BellPi 6W9 45 11 97ft 97ft 97ft- % GaPw7ft019J 14 79ft 79ft 79ft + ft 

BetlPd 7%I2 43 3 85ft 85ft 8S%- ft GPw 7%C2JI 92 5 80ft 80ft 80ft- ft 

BellPa 7>A13 43 18 90ft 90ft 90ft + ft GPw7ft02DVA 3 80 80 BO 


4 76 76 76 

6 67% 67% 67% 

4 70ft 70% 70%+ ft 
12 98ft 98% 98%+ ft 

5 90 90 90 

10 81 81 B1 .. .. 

16 114 113% 113% - ft 

19 109ft ID ID -1 
25 98% 98% 98ft.. .. 
18 63ft 63 63ft +1 Vi 

25 55ft 55ft 55ft 

5 727 127 127 - ft 


UVIndSMSScv 26 83ft 83 83% 

UCar 5Js97 6.9 11 76% 78% 76%+% 
(JnCo7%97 11. 5 71ft 71ft 71ft- ft 


UnAL4Vii92 cv 
UBrnd 6ft88 9.9 
UBmd 5ft#4 cv 


15 105ft 103 1C3 ~ 

5 101% 101% 101%- Ift UJer 7.9509 41 5 98 
5 «ft mi 9tfi-2% UnNudMB cv 22 ID 
3 I0D% 100ft 100ft- ft HfSXSJSH l 5 

8 100ft 100 ID HSSPSPK C? 2 

7 ID 106ft M6ft- ft USSH «W6 6.8 57 M 

34 101ft 100% 101% U»h 5ft01 CV 92 98 

10 120 119% 120 +% H njee SW1 Cv 3 106 

4 5 78 78 78 +1 UnTeC4ft92Cv 20 93 

10 78% 78% 78% UnT«:%a5 47 25 104 

5 <8% 68% 68%- % UnJH “ 

5 104% 104% 104%+ % y'S^XPT, 112 l ,“1 

97 68ft 68% M%- % UD|hn8%85 X 8101 

1 89 S S USLIF 9*85 9.2 10 IIS 1 

12 47 46 46 -1ft VaEP Jftttcv 30 67 

.1 5 49ft 49ft 49%- ft VaRy fe3CM9-2 1 

1 30 49ft 49ft 49ft + % WaqE6%8648 3 78 1 

2 7 M% S% 61ft- % W0|tJ5%91 cv 10 87 

2 28 45% 45 45 WallJ8s9B 9.9 2 ,8ff 

i 14 84% 84 84 - 2 Wwn5ft93ncv 3 g! 

1 86 86 86 WMn5ft93 CV 5 53 

RctGo 9%99 12.1 2 81ft Elft 81ft.... '^ f TL P ^” cv *»»! 

RovrC 5*92 Cv 2 61 60% 61 + ft WWrL SWW CV 1010V 

Rexn5%01 cv 7 111 111 113 -3% WAIrL 10S84 14 45 10O 

Reyln THfll 44 10 88% 8T4 88% -1% EEKHP 1 ,,J ? S 
cv 99 TVh 7<ft 77%+lft WUC 51497 cv , 8 52 

" ” ™ n% SStft WUCIOWII 3 16 M 

cv 10 71 77 71 + % WUTI X9 I 7T 

46 4 104ft 104ft !04ft+ % a S U 10 W 

cv 6 53% 53ft 53ft- ft WUT 845*96 10 I 5 83| 

II. 4 105 104ft 104%+ ft WUTj 2*8MlJ 25 1U- 

10. 5 TOO 100 in WstgE 5%92 7 A 10 73 

» 7 71ft 71% 71% - % JWJfU 5 97 

.. 4 51ft 51ft 51ft Wte/8 ftaOW_BJ K W 

cv 1118 118 118 Weyhr fc&5 7S 191BF 

cv 9 116ft 116ft 116ft + % WJJ«C5*Wacv 2188ft 
cv io 121% 121% 721% -ift whM*i swraw , “ ft 

12 5 101ft 101ft 101ft SE ItttSSU -4 ^ 2 

1IU A 82 82 82 ..... Wllllkr 4*88 CV 44 60 

n j i2 iioft iioft no* 1*1 


5 82 

82 

& ..... 

GTCal 8*96 9 A 

5 94 

94 

94 +2 f 


rr^pi 

95 82* 

81* 

82%+lft 

GWat Bftsto 9. 

1 97% 

97% 

97% - % F 




BellPa 9*14 49 10 Ml 


Friday, August 6, 1978 


ck HtehlWCtereCta. 

Mcfr 15% 15% K%+ % 

•17% 17 17%— % 2000 tten Hostwt 

■MM 6% 5ft «%+7 200 Granoer An 

12 12 72 — % mm rn.,1. 


BenCp 8ft76 45 
BenCp 7*96 44 
BenCp 7*98 45 


GOPw 11*79 743 54 706ft 106% 106ft + % 


3 100% 100% 100% | GBP H*00 145 44 110% 109% 110%+ ft 


GaPtlftOS 146 10 111 


■Ml Uter Oo*8 Owl 500 Zoocon Core 


BenCp 7*98 45 5 87ft 87% 87ft G<k(ii 9ft829J 25 1BS% lOS 1 ^ 105%+ % 

Benco 9ft 79 9.2 10106 106 106 + ft Grace 4ft90 CV 7 67ft 67% 67*- % 

BenflF 5s77 5.7 8 97% 97% 97% Grace 6ft96 CV 80 96ft 95% 95*- % 


PACIFIC 


% ,fft ,5%+'^ 2n Graour Am 

; 12 12 —w 12400 GtBoUn wl 

... - 5700 Int luteat 

• C . M 286 JntlndoM pf 

KtehUreWoS »?lMMeIi M ph 


Berkv 5ft86 cv 
BethSt 3^9X3 
Beftist r+so 3A 


2 90% 90* 90% +7 
1 85% 85% 85*+ % 


+ % GGfan 4*92 cv 70 62% 62% 62%+ ft 


BettlSI 4*90 02 3 71ft 71ft 71ft+ % GrevF9.784 


Grev6><l90 cv 75 » D 
■Grevh9ft019J 9 101*701 


3ft S •Tg+ % 
14% 14ft MS.... 
6lW6 6ftAJ5-16+M6 


™ ■ 2200 Memorox 

M.+ % 1000 Uerchm 

1^...™ 110 MKnCp 


6 17-H4TW6S IM6— ft 
1% 1% 1% 

if istr* 


M 6+ 1-16 lOONytrocrics 
1800 PGTma 
; iM6— % 500 pocsk 
T i&rTT!: 1608 SaseOil 
48% — ft 400 SlIvrDIr 
3fi..." 300 5CGSMA 


-.'■a'a ^ ssssastf % .a his-ssitsts 

dor . 4ft 4% 4%— % low TooG ZLBtof 30% 30 30%+ ft! Total sales 234400 stares. 

Foreign Stock Exchanges 

’RONTO Sites, ' modi '- HWHawnonOafl Sates Stock 


SBP St £ go MercanWe Exchang 

i .15-16 15-16-4-16 ion eik lussiios 2 5-i6 2 i-i6 2 W6-M6 moved up amid so me belie 
27% 26 % 27%+ ft Tow alas i9ojx» dare s. that price, might hav 

273-* Z73^ z73 te +3 ' Philadelphia bottomed out. Recently man; 

J R ,i* Kft sate* ^ ' HW L^aare o*. fpennakets have been of 

9% ift 9ft+% so Bair 6E 6J0pf o cl 83 +2 fermg specials on bee 

$2 & iS 2 because of the large supply o 

16% 16% 16%+ % 38 st S;;;;; animals that recenriy have beei 


Bonin 4*91 62 10 70 70 

BosE 12*79 11.4 7110%1T0 
Btf5ft86xw7.9 3 72% 77 
Brswk 4*11 cv 7 83% 87 
BuddS%94 CV 3 89% D 
Bulova 6S90 Cv 5 W 59 
Burllnd SS91 CV 5 n% HP. 
Burttol%96 9. j M 94 


IS R 09 W - ft 

9 101* Ml 101*- % 

10 100% 100% 100%+ % 


0 70 70 70 Grofer4*87cv 70 35% 35% 35%+ % 

7110*110 110%- % Gnder 9*91 14.7 70 64% 64% 64%+ ft 

3 72% 774 72%+ % Gm<n4%92 cv 10 57 57 57 - % 

7 83% 83% 83% +1% Grwnm8s99cv 2 107* Ml* 101* 


2 89% D D -1 

5 59 59 59 

5 80* 80ft 80ft- % 


Grumm8s99cv 2 7 07% 101* ID* 

GuoM 7*79 1AA 24 46 45% 45% 

GlfWn 6988 41 8 74* 74 74 - % 

GlfW 5*93 cv 46 100% 99% 100%+ % 


94 GHWn 75038 9.9 & 71 


L }& S because of the large supply of 

Ift 16 %+'% 35M m tovr 3ft nS nt animals that recently have beer. 

5 3 2::: i , a pric “ 

30%+ ft Total salts 234000 stares. downward temporaruy. 

October delivery cattle closed 

Dxchan^es S 2 F pound ’ upfram 


BurNo 5 1 A92 CV ' 35 90% 90% 90%-]% GltOil 8*95 45 4 100% 100% 100% - % 

Burro 7%ll 7J 8 100% 100% KB* HamP 5sS4 cv 5 69% Mft 69ft + ft 

•Cl TP 7*81 7.7 4 9t% 98% 98ft- ft Ham 7*96 cv 38 95% 95 95 

CIT 445382 46 8 M3% IU% 103% KeKr9*9l 9.7 1 94 94 94 

CWH4MS92 CV 5 49% 49% 49%+ % HeOer 7*1049 5 98ft 98ft 98ft- % 

CobCF 8*81 132 10 63% 63% 63%+lft Hercul8%8345 7 102% 102* 102*- % 

Coesr 12*90 1X4 13 93% 93 93%+ ft HCUbn4*97cv 25 88 17% 88 

CPc4s pot) 47 13 45ft 45% 45%+ ft HIltnH 5*95 CV 14 79 71 79 +1% 


CartH 7.9582 41 65 98* 98* 9B%+1% HoerWSsM cv 25 108% 108* 108ft -Ift 


U5BO 7%D 92 


UnTec 5*91 cv 


UDlhn 8*85 4 


WooE 6*8648 


Ween5*93ncv 
Wean 5*93 cv 
W5PtP7U»CV 


WUTI 6%B9 49 


WhMt5%93cv 


Whltk 1DS88 11. 


madlu tends. - ■* Zf 
ids unless marfcad % ~ ' 

. ' '«M 
dish Low Dow Ow. 
l J6ft 6% .«% 
52% Uft 12* . 
JlZft 12% U% * 
355 355 355 

- A 5D% 13% tt% 

*27 27 27 +1 

. 420 410 UO +10 

a 

13% 13%-% 
9 9 ■■ 

■ft aft— ft 

U M%+-% 
430 435 +5 
81 81—5 

305 310 +10 

5% 5% 
m no — 2 
8% a%+ ft 
6ft 6ft 
22* 22ft ■ 


Sites. • Stock 
lkSDotesoi A. 
1740 Dom Store 
4000 Teztte A' 

7T» Du ■to'ont 

348 East JMal 
78585 Fa km C 
553/ Falcon 
400 Cod lad A 
IBOFianana 
1700 G . rDlstrb A 

7UC0 Gnf Masd 
2250 GJbrelter 
UOOGrenduc 
758 Gt Oil Sds 
600 GL paper 
llNGmrM 
IDO Goar Tret - 
7400 Haarbrn C 
350 Hard Cm A 
2500 Hawker S 
502 Hayes D A 
925 H Bay Co 
2101 AC 
2000 Intel 
1115 Maud Gas 
MU Mtaul 
2826 lid PHw A 
1955 lav Cm A 
3375 Kaiser Re 
4480 Kbps' Tran 


Htek Low Oose Oia. Safes Stock 
27% 27%-% 9520Starrm A 
14% Uft+ ft 900Statant 
9 9 — % 200 Sigma 

14ft 14ft+ ft 39089 Sapiens 
ID ID + 2 1460 Skopina S 

7ft 8ft+ ft 500 Hater SB 

43* 43% nnsoottra A 
5% 5ft+ ft 2009 Brodctf 

7ft 7ft + ft dOO Stefa A 

8ft Ift 7600 Steep R 

134 134 150 Tem • 

7ft 7ft+ ft SUTeek Car 

130 130 — 2 500 Tack Oar 

5 5 • SOOOTetedme 

30% 30*— Ift 1400 Tex Cm 
It 18 1100 TtaB 8 

5ft 5ft 7545 Tor Dm 

an .310 +10 100 Tar Star 

5ft 5ft 470 Traders A 

6ft 6ft . 2220 Tras ID 
5ft 5ft— ft 2872 TrOn PL 
17ft I7ft+ ft 38426 UGu A 


Net 

Hteb Low dose Cba. 

» 7ft 7ft 

$14% 14% 14%-% 

*16% 16% 16* — % 

MIL CSL £ILX 2L 

1440 Shnpson S $9% 9ft 9ft iDI milllU Ml JJJUU11 

500 S/ater sn *8 ft B 8ft+ ft T 

nnsoettra a $23% a 23%+ % 

2089 Brodctf $*% *% 8ft 

dfflOSteltt A $27 27 27. . __ _ 

Moosteep r 780 TO 180 + 5 Continued From Page 25 

150 Tar* $19 19 »— ft 

too Tack Got b 310 3io w and it could push interest rates 
snoTBfedrne $« «% « down slightly later this month 
7ioo t£» ■ a $ 7 3ft 73ft 73 ft— ft if the money supply grows 


TREASURY SELLS 
$1 BILLION ISSUE 


case 3%s78 3.7 5 94% 94ft 94ft- ft HonvIF 7S7B7.1 . 14 98ft 98 90 •-% 

Cose 5VM90 7.9 1 69% 69ft 69ft + % HOUSF 4%87 6J IS 69% Mft Mft- ft 

CastICSftMcv 10 77% 77% 77* HOUSF 8J86 42 5 101% 707* IOI*+ % 

CatTr SJSP2 45 2 81 81 17 +1 HdUSL S%85 Cv 17 86% 16 86%+lft 

Cave 11*00 11 J 14 99 98% 9«%- % HNG 9.75*05 45 IS 103ft 103% 103%- Ift 


9. 25 92% 92% 92%..... lESJKSRtt 


5.8 5 90% 89% 90% +2% 

9. 8 IDft 102% 102ft 

L5 1 85ft 85ft 85ft 

72 25 88 87* 88 +1% 

U 34 1D% 102* 102% 

rj 85 99% 99% 99% - % 

1.7 11 90* 98% 98% 

cv 56 51ft 51% Sift 

r. 9 40 97* 97ft 97ft- ft 
1.7 77 81* 80* 80% - % 

44 ID 100ft too* inft+l 

9.3 14 96% 95ft 95ft- % 

CV 10 ID ID ID 

U‘ 20 81% 81% 81% + ft 
L 50 101% 101% 101*- * 

45 17 ID* 701ft ID - ft 

4a io in in in +i 

1.4 5 97ft 97ft 97ft + % 

U in 09 89 +1 

1 2 5 96% 96% 96% - % 

9. 22 1109a 170% UOfc+1% 

7. 2 99ft 99ft 99ft 

J 10 97* 97* 97%+ % 

A 21 95* 95 95 - % 

IS 42 97ft 97ft 97ft + % i 

CV 1 83ft 83ft 83ft + % | 


7 85* 85* 85*. 


ChsBfc 4*93 CV 2 67ft 67ft 67ft ITTF 10*9510.1 10 104 104 KM -1 

O&Bk 8ft86 46 58 ID 101% ID + % ITTF 11*85 105 16 ID ID ID + % 

Owe 4*96 cv 56 75 74* 74ft- ft lOBeHr 8*04 43 8 97ft 96 96 - ft 


Continued From Page 25 


OlsC 6599 6. 60 99ft 99ft 99ft JnMJc 10*82 9J 

ChMtg 7*78 10-4 41 76* 75ft 75ft + * InMiC 1IS83 101 

OtAUg 6*96 CV 8 45 44ft 44ft + * IndBol 1*11 01 

ChMg 7*83 1X7 30 54ft 54% 5«ft+ * IndBel 1 0s 14 9. 

Chetee5VM3cv 16 57* D 57* inWS« 8*95 8.1 

CheNY 5S93cv 5 68* 68* 68* inSJICO 9%99 CV 

dlNY 5*96 cv 2 70 ' 70 70 Inslnv 7*80 12J 

CUNY 6*8049 5 96* 96* 96*+* (ntHrv 4*88 64 

CXO 4*92 7J 1 61* 61* 61ft +1% InKrv 44*1 7.4 

•OiO 3*960 4J 4 74 » 74 irdHrv 8*95 9.1 


IrtttiC 10'.482 92 5 107% ID* 107% - * 

InMiC 11 £83 KL3 2 ID ID ID 

IndBel 8%ll 43 1 98 98 98 + ft 

IndBel I Os 14 92 35 1114 ID ID - * 

InMStt 8ft95 47 10 100% 100% 100%+ % 
Indies 9%99cv 5 10 ID ID -3 

litsfnv 7*80 1X5 13 63 63 63 - ft 

IntHrv 4*88 64 J4 Mft 69* 69ft+lft 

InKrv 44591 7.4 21 61% 64% 64% 

IrdHrv 8*95 9.1 5 95 95 95 + * 


12* igfc- ft 19723 Kerr A A 
5* 5*+ % 1400 Koffter A 


it* ffta 

41J*'-OB* +M 
8* * %+ ft 

2D* 2D% 

IS*, w* . 
20 aoft+ift 
425 430 +10 


779 LatMtl A' 
3800 Lacaaa 
OOQLOrrt COS 
1111 LL He . 
2300 Lab Co A 
55 Lnfc Co B 
200 Lata M 
600 Melon H A 
1895 MB IM 
100 M Lf Mltte 

isnoMahnul- A 


uoo toob a a $i3* io* a*— * if the money supply grows 

J»iU >r A “ lif* i^ u* + 54 The interest rate on the Fed- 
2220 Tras Ht a sw 9% v*+ ft end funds that banks lend to 

wHUGa? a* ‘** « each other touched a high of 

15 IS 1 % 55/16 percent and then de- 

^ ^9* 47TOU oat Dft T& ?*- ft clined Slightly to close at the 

2 ® 288 — $ 700 um Can 113 113 113 —7 rlc uercent level. 

Jfit 14%+ ft 400 Vas Dar . 290 290 290 — 10 ■ 'zZzl 1 - _ 0 _ 

7* 7 % 4340 vomer p • sis* uft 15% In the* corporate bond mar- 

16 * -% too weMvmd $10* io* nw- ft ket the General Motors Ac- 1 

113 115 + 3 730Mten $U% 10% 10% ■ |-^7n. .rlnn t^raicrul 

uft 13* loo west Mine 435 435 435 —5 ceptancQ Corporation ipereasea 

450 460 +15 . 350 Wooden] a $i«i lift isft+ ft the note offering it planned to 
lift Mft 61D0Yk Bar 285 Z77 280 — * Told, vtASTm 

335 335 —s Total sates 1^1440 stares make next Tuesday to S2UO 

w ^ — 15 million from the $150 million 

420 426 'MnTtfT'RFAT the big finance company origj- 

DO 480 -JO fflU^lKUrAiv nally annouoced. 

7*- * aaetetfaes hi ««h. The notes, which will mature 

in 10 years, are being sold by 
T7% 17 % sates sfoqi Rto& Law os* aw. a Morgan Stanley & Company 
f«;«8iS S und erwriting network. 

I? iSt ft s m is* m ^ * Closed End F un ds 

Mft 16ft 400 CAE iltd $ 10* 10* 10% WiO&CU J2/X1U Jr UJJUa 

55 + 5 mom In Jmt % Tin 21ft 21*... mded Aw-.t 1976 

395 395 + 5 TKnSltWtee l* 4^ % DIVERSIFIED COMMOH STOCX FUNDS 

W* SUriAiAiAKt ■ is&aj. 

W 14 105 MLW-Witt $ Wft Wft- Wft— fe AdmElp 15.W TTft —310 

350- 3S0 — » 100-Mow Trust • S 10* 1«l Wft— ft Advanai TL32 IT* —24 

30 30 — * 1QSB4 Price Co 1 14* T 4* 14*+ ft QrrtWS T7J0 la -212 

5 5 — ft 10OT Rnlfaod A S 5* 5ft 5ft CwrtSeC 4M gi -344 

26 « . M5?Rmrai Bank S 29ft 28* 27ft+ * &*Alnv 13^1 B* -06 

V as — % 730 Ray Treat A S Hft 19 19*+ ft 

6ft J%+ ft 700 stetetwre A S- Uft 15% ts%+ ft 6»dUoo M21 12% ^X9 


CPtVA6*79 4» 10 98 98 9B + ft InWrv 9sM 9.1 17 98* 98* 98* 

CPoVa 9*15 XI 3 104* IWft 104ft- ft lnHvC4*79i2 10 89 W W 


17ft T7ft+ ft 9042 Moore 
6* 7 + ft} 350 Nat Trwf 


26* 27ft+ ft 
+4* 44%+ % 
12ft Uft 
5* 6 

470 470 

10 10 - ft 

315 315 
256 256 

370 370 +5 

12ft 12ft 
” 

6 4% 

B 8 

lift Tift- ft 
61* 61%-* 
375 37$ —10 


ft MDKoranda A 
% 3005 Norm 

. moo Howiea W 
300OSF led- 
2500 Ordian A 
ft 1240 Oshawa A .. 
1280 Pwnoor A 
4658 PanCae P 
5 183 Patina H V 

100 Pen bln A 
960 Pipe Point 
J2B Pitts C 
154 Placer 
850 itedpatti A 
ft 10600 Rood Oslr A 
ft 4905 Revno. Prp 
0 3575 Stall COn 


ChrCftftsD cv 41 M 60 60 InHrvC9s84 8J 20101* ID 

Chrvsi 8*95 10.1 20 88 88 ■ + % inAAInC 4s?l cv 29 01 » 

Chrvilr MSB 10.1 26 80 79% 79*- % taPH 4*96 CV 17 6$>A 65 

ChF 435s91 9.9 . 25 84ft 84% 84%-* lnfTTIlsC9A 5 111ft 111 1 

OuysF 7S79 7 A 25 94% 94 »l InTT 1*2000 cv 

QwF 10581 9A 94 10T* 101ft ID* IpcoH 5*89 CV 

Otlcn>6%» 7. 5 95* 95* 95*- ft M 7395 CV 

atK7p6s»6J 21 99ft 99ft 99ft IW 8s96 cv 

Ottcrp5*00cv 35100ft TOO* l»ft- ft JaneL9ft959J 

atSvc 7978 7. 10 99% 99% 99% Kone9%90 141 

Cfytnv 7%90ev 38 D% D D%.. .. KerrMc 8s83 4 

Cttvlnv 8*91 10.4 4 77* 77* 77*+* KWTMC 8V1O6 8J 


lnHrvC9s$4 M 201DftlD WH4+ ft 
InMJnC 4s9l cv 29 91 » 89% -1% 

InPap 4*96 CV 17 6$<A 65 65* ♦ * 

InfTT IlsD 92 5 mft 111ft 111ft+ % 

InTT 8%2000 cv 60 123 122* 121 - % 

IpCOH 5*89 CV 10 60ft 60% 60%-lft 

IW 7s95 cv 15 D Uft 86ft- ft 

ltd 8s96 cv 16 100% 1® ID -1 
JOWL 9*959.8 5 100% 100% 100% + % 

Kane«%90 141 1 *4 M 94 

KerrAAc 8s83 4 20 100% 180* 100%+ * 

KerrMc 8%06 4$ 10 lot* in* in*- * 


5 71* 

71% 

71*- * 

13 ID 

ID 

ID - * 

16 154 

ID 

ID -1 

21 10* 

104 

104 +1 

44 64 

63 

63 - % 

14 68 

67 

68 

3 54% 

54% 

54% - % 

10 68 

68 

68 - % 

5 53 

53 

53 

9 79* 

79 

79*+% 

15 95% 

95% 

«% 

5 92% 

97* 

92*- 1* 

S 98% 

98 

98 +1 

22 1(0% ID 

102%+ ft 

17 73* 

73* 

73*+ % 

3 79% 

79% 

79%+ * 

5) 68% 

68 

68 - * 

92 98 

97* 

97*- * 

3 106 

106 

106 -1 

20 93% 

93 

93 -1 

25 KM 

UO% 103ft- * 

M 86 

84% 

86 +5 

2 95ft 

95ft 

95ft -2ft 

8 101% 101 

Ml%+ % 

10 103% ID* U3%- % 

30 67* 


67*+ * 

1 65% 

65% 

65%+ % 

3 78% 

78* 

78*+ ft 

10 87 

87 

37 - ft 

2 .00% 

80* 

80* 

3 52% 

52% 

52% -1 

5 a 

S3 

a 

5 104% 104% 104%+ ft 

10 101ft 701 

101ft+1ft 

45 100* ID 

100% 

21 89* 

89ft 

89ft + ft 

,8 52 

51% 

51*+ ft 

16 94* 

94% 

94*+ * 

I 73* 

73* 

73* 

10 58* 

SB* 

58* 

5 83% 

83% 

83% - % 

25 III* 110* 110*+ * 

ID 73 

73 

73 +1 

5 97ft 

97ft 

97ft 

25100% 100% 100%+ % 

19 100* 100* 100ft 

1 88ft 

-% aa%- 1 

46 48 

47% 

48 +ft 

8 58 

SB 

SB 

44 60 

58% 

59**1* 

3 91 

91 

91 - ft 

5 106 

05% 105ft- % 

10 9S 

95 

95 

13 90% 

89 

90ft +1ft 

5 85 

BS 

as + ft 


Wootw 7*96 4 7 5 85 85 85 + * 
WOdhuti 9S99 9.1 41 99% 98* 99ft 

vjvtv7*9si cv in 23* a a -1% 
Xerox £s9S cv D 100* 100% 100* +4 
Xerox L2SB2 4 31 ID 101ft ID + ft 

Yn 10%20n 10.4 4 101 ID 101 

ZapOtf 7*85 7.9 5 99 99 99 -1 

Zavre5ft94 cv 12 55 55 55 

FOREIGN BONDS 

Austia 6'-aa 6J 1 in in in 

Austta 8*83 8J 10 ID* ID* ID* 

Austin 8'vai B2 ID 100ft 10K. 100 7 j+ % 

Austia 9ft94 92 » in 99% 99% 

Caisse 9%B) 9. 10 101* 101% 101* 

Eurotm 9S82 48 5 101* 101* 101*+ ft 

EurCS 8*79 46 23 102% ID* ID* 

ElirCS8*83 44 13 99* W% 99*+% 
EurCS 9s% 9.1 3 99 99 99 +1% 
JapnOBWBO 8 A 15101% 101% 101%+1% 
Mexcol0s809.7 10103 ID ID + % 
Mexco9%81 9J 8 100* 100ft 100ft+ ft , 
Norwy S’.iSl 02 25 100* 100* 100*- * t 


American Exchange Bond Trading 


Ctvlnv 8%91 146 9 76* 76% 76*..... Kresoe 6s99 cv 10117*117*117*-! 
OkEaOftD 9. 12 103ft 103ft WJft I LTVSs8S 92 .50 54% 54 54*+* 


CtetfEI 8*05 48 17 100 99% ID ♦ * LTV 7%s77 cv 46 ID 134 134 -9 

CtavEI 9*609 9. 1 ID* 102* ID*- * LearSlOsMMA 11 94% 94% 94%+% 
ClvE9.85s»9J 3 106 106 106 + % Litton 3%87cv 10 55% 56* 56ft- ft 

' CohlG SS82 49 19 85 Mft Mft+ * LOCkh 4*92 CV 60 <3 42% 43 + % 

CoklG9S94 49 5 WO* 100ft 100ft- ft Lnew6ft93 M. » 49ft 68* M 

CGS7%97M 48 6 BS 85 85 LomN 5%91 cv 32 63% 63% 63%+* 

CotuPi 5*94 cv 10 D% 57% 58% + % LalsLt9*H3 9. 10 103 102% 102% - % 

CoiWf 42S8015J 11 52* 52* 52* Lvie 7%94n T0J2 12 73* 73* 73*+% 

CmlCr 6*776.9 26100 99* in Lvkes7%94 M.2 17 73ft TVU 73ft- % 

CanWOr Ml 4 10 99* 99* 99* -3* LyK 11S2000 149 1 100% 100% 100% 


CmC4AB8143 19101% 101 ID* .'.... MGIC 5S93 cv » 60% 60 60%+* 
CmfQr8ftU47 42101ft ID* 101%+ * | MGlC8ft889J 6 88% 88% 88% 


42* 42*+ * 
14* 14* — S 
37ft 38ft— ft 
12 JZft-ft 
Mft 16* 

M0 M0 +.5 

34# 36—5 
395 395 +5 
255 258 + 3 
34ft 24ft 
W 14 
35D- 3S0 — W 

*8.1=8 

26 24 • 

25 25 — % 

6ft 6%+ ft 
70 71 + T 

15ft 16ft- .ft 


CmwE 3$77 XI 2 98* 99% 98* M0CO6sB7 CV 7 67 57 67 ..... HusKQ 6*77 CV 44 98 96% 96% -2% 

QllwE 7*76 7J 41 MO 100 MO McBTr7ft97 9 A 5 84>% 84ft Uft ^^6%92 w 18 fift u d9ft+ ft 

CmwE 7ft7B 72 3 99ft 99ft 99*-* Madke4ft92cv 1 53ft 53ft 53ft + * « W* 61 + % 

OTIWE 917916 20 104* Ml* 104*+ ft MCfCr 8j22 B.1 10 98* 9Bft 98%+!% iS^CTM^CV 1 W 99 59 -4 

* skmsk* mccSmdw i «% «% 5%+% 

CmwE 9*83 45 20 TOS* 11SV. 105V...... MadS 4*87 CV 7 63* 6W—.. McCulTO%scv 4 92 92 92 


AJWott 5%71 cv 9 47 47 47 - % 

Benet 6%S9I CV 40 45% 45ft 45ft+* 

Butte 5%s88 cv 17 101% in* in*+ * 
CaCmp7s92cv 5 57% 59% 59%- % 
Condec 6s82 cv 5 a 73 73 +! 

COftdC 7*96 Cv 8 103 ID ID ♦ * 

ConOG 8s86 CV 9 97 96* 97 -I 

ConTI 5*86 cv 1 79 79 79 +1 

CrysOIl JS84 cv 18 ID ID ID +5 

Dated 5*95 CV 20 72% 72% 72% - ft 

Elgin 6%S88 cv 1 85 85 85 + % 

FfSCtt 5%s87 CV 19 84% 84 84% 

GrevtiC 6S86 cv 10 70 70 70 .. .. 

GurM 6*686 19.6 1 34% 3T% 34% 

GHAtt 7.7580 11.8 17 66 65% 65%+ % 

HanP 11*90 11J 1 ID ID ID +1 
HuSkO 6*97 CV 44 98 96ft 96 V* '2* 
InvDiv 6%92 cv 18 65ft 65 65%+% 

J0THL1 6*94 11.1 D 61 60* 61 + % 

Kelt 6*587 CV 1 59 57 57-4 


Elgin 6*588 cv 1 85 85 

FfSCtt 5%s87 CV 19 U% 84 
GrevtjC 6s86 Cv 10 70 70 


CmwE 9*83 8J 20 105% IDS* 70S* I MadSdWD CV 7 63* 63* 63* 

Cne>5d6s94cv 40 soft 99* D%+ % I MeCo 5VW8 47 10 90 89ft Mft- % 


CortnM 6*90 cv . 8 75* 75 75 - U MeYX 9.7SC2 9^ 

ConEd 2*82 X7 5 73% 73% 73%+% AfkfrH 7.6s81 72 

ConEd 3*85 52 72 62 61% 61ft-1ft MarO 4*87 52 

ConEd Mft XI ft U 62 82 +* Marco 6*82 7 A 


MsYk 9.1sD 92 » 98* 98* 98*+ ft 
AtfrH 7.6581 7 2 7 101 ID ID +2 
MarO 4*87 5LI 3 75 75 . 75 +2* 
Marco (M887A 31 53ft 83 B .. .. 


McCP7%7941 8 92* 92* 92*+* 

MCCP 7.7582 49 10 87 87 87 +1 



11. 1 8 104 1D% 1M +2 

9.4 2 85 05 05 +1 

CV 5 33ft 33ft 33ft 

146 11 47% 47* 47*+ * 

11.5 3 87 87 87 + It 

cv 10 71 71 71-1 

cv 21 36% 36 36%+ * 

CV 10 66 66 66 

cv 1 68* 68* 68*..... 
CV 7 W* 74* 74*- ft 
cv 5 57 57 57 - ft 

CV 10 a 72 73 +1 

1X2 3 98* 98* 98*+* 

cv 14 58 50 50 

CV S 61 61 61 +1 

L7 5 93* 93* 93*..... 
46 6 91* 91* 91*- ft 
5.9 17 HO* TOP ID ..... 

1.1 4 100 HO in • 

.. 1 101% 101% 101% 

ar 25 76* 76* 76* +3 

,9 26 77% 77 77% +2* 

14 2D 67% 67% 67% +1% 
V 4.$0. .d0. 


vi-ln ba nk ru ptcy or mxtverfcip or betas reorganized under tte Bankruptcy Act, 


ConEd 4*91 LI IS 57* 57* 57*- *1 MWOor5s96cv 33 95% 95* 95* - * I antaned by sueft avnpanles. xi— Ex Interest. g-CartWc^es. st-Stampotf. 


CEd 4W2W 7.9 40 SS 55 55 + * 

ConEd 4*99 42 5 56% 56% 56%+ % 


ConEd 9*s 9J 9 95 s 
CoEd 7.9101 9.7 27 82 
•COEH7.9SD9.8 II 8! 


K * 6*54 cv SO 97% 97 
5%94 CV 24 76 76 


95ft + * I MaMu 6*91 cv 10 70* 70* 


80ft D%+% 
80% II - ft 


97 

?D%+"* 


Mate 6*90 CV 30 118* 110* 118*+ * 
Myr 7.85596 8J 3 92ft 92ft 92% -2ft 


860Zdlare 395 390 390 

Total sates 334A71 stares. 


. -'MILAN' . 

. Htita Rre)~' . 

’ . .in, MtataH M nf 
• 4» MhvUna 

- m I OOrefl* j 
XMlTtrefflSpa 


.LONDON 

((a British pans ootea otherwise anecffladl 


TARTS 

3g|iaigteBiftr 
■m l PacMner 
0.roJ;Raflotedniteoa 
'5*1 Hum Feotenc 
wi'SatartsMMa - 


597 UC ■ 
W»MI 
, 497 AIM Brew 

APQrewr 
. , ® tateadi 

-..VO Aarlow 
■ 396fjLT.lBd 
licc 

Bhnnore 
Bsc Inti 


an Hoof 3io 

£l9ft iml * J11 

68ft LssRa ' 

112* LloydS - 1D% 

]55% Ldn Brick « 

76 Utenm 215 

252% LK3S 207% 

-130 Marts , J® 

267% Metal BOX 259% 

112% Midland -257% 

310 MiBBfMRasoors 2K% 


« AMSTERDAM 
tad, - (In ttaHieftaBds soMm)' 
AfczoKV . 3410 Had Unis 

310 Amtf/Rdt Bank 71 JO Philips 
111 DsQ Moots 97-SO RovaTbutett 
FoZkar 3SA0 Uallvrer - 

HeUwtan 144.10 cVan Oramoren 
^ HolFAn Line 0930 KLM 
“5 Hmmu . 6420 Hat Hod _ 

Ate Bank Hod- 30L50 Altaft KeOa 
©4n parent of uretnal vatea. 


CteBonalr^ 


UTONEY . 

no doltirs and ants) 
IJ9 Myar 

<5 -S' 

ijg tcsoitt 

w; wooivvte .. 
*3* him -h-r 


Burner 
*1 kiackan 
1 . 490 n-pat 

.-■fifS Baroahniv 

. ' “J Gk Sdnrp . 
CivjoJrun •. 
Charter Cobs 
• ; Oim Uo 
Cans Gold • 

. Ctartndds 

BsijRoe . 

gigsr* 

. "S-^ans . 


tW- TVfBansrii t»« 1A* FSGertaM 

U2 ■ . ... Go MfD 

I — L— ^ - - • Clan 

TOKYO 7 

JmtttaYn) - ' Grand Met 

112 MitsriCa 429 Cwrt 

565 HigmOn .-- »§■*.... 
217 (Hptem Steal Out 138 HwjP** 
m 5wy qjtdi avraHtqn, 
337 -JcmtoaeCten 99 
«8 TokreMarUFlre * 2??SjL 


153 TtaHta Elec 
IWlTwa, .. 
139: Toyota MBtec 
124! TWO KdSVO 


OB IfcoFrasm- 
151 Cl 
«s Inm . 

aaJa 


61 Hal West 
H2 PAD 
« Phillips- ' 

178 Ptesw ■ 

n Pete Plat 

565% Pres Braod 
- IN Pres Stem 
4Z pm 
51# Rank • 
48% RD 
IM RCM 
-132% RncUtt . 
125% RniHtltt . 
-143% Rond IBS • 
TO RTZ 
-IMS Sal Trust 
238% Shell ' 
’130* SHM 
m sifcr 
84. Splltere- 
W Stead 8K- 
430 stHtenteUT 
334% Tanks. 

575 TAIL - 
. I** Thom , 
1A% Toroer jtesfl 
tuft Tutas 
367% UD5, 

308% Uttramar ■ 
912% ;Onltevar 
65% OnKmCWP 
W5% Vaab 
IK mats , 
Mft vn state 
725 Kteotaorm 
414 TTeftM 
283% WDites . 
» WDora 
3D W.KuM ■- 
73* ZaadSH 
04% ZC1 


21 fS Artod . 

800 AssurGea 
78 Ekdrobal 
133 Ford 
B75 ImpBM 
' 500 HoMwe 
TO 
IdO 
35ft 

140 4CC 
330% J™. 
224% 


FRANKFURT 
(luGenMB carts) 
KdBL, Rhata Wosteh 
15DJ0(sctaflM 


NtaaraSh 14-04 lift -17J 

OsoosScc LO 3* -1IJ 

Tr+CBBN ...» MJ6 »ft -33.9 

United 11-08 9 —18 A 

• US&For : 22S 16% -3L3 

108 SPECIALIZED EQUITY AND 

29.10 CONVERTIBLE FUHDS 

12670 AmGenCV «»-*» Uft — T7A 

11460 AnrntlS 13-41 10* -23 J. 

731 ASA (b) 15.60 17* — 13J) 

T2X® tatarfan 5S.15 33* -39.7 

BwicnittCv 2148 15% -05 

lW-» caittetal 22J5 16ft -OJ 

OasaCsBs 11.M 7 ft -3L4 

CUC (—7.77) 

BRUSSELS uutoWIhl 9a .5* 

(taOstohun fanes) ?Tm St Zw° 

X9»1 PilreSiW 9/m IHL f* =7 

. 3 S& 3 .™ *2£r*** ^ 

-1^65 1 (Won Mlntere l.wEfift. % +a?3 

4»n ion San Baneo. 2J6Q R^C -■■■■■■.■■■■■ IS- 

-no^ronr SMIC8 -- 30.1S -0-| 

Stria 29 JB 25ft — 343 

VILdDtQi 425 2% -44J 


ConEd 7*03 9A 10 80% 80% 00%+ ft McCnr 5s81 7^4 5 68 68 68 - % 

CnEd 44503 92 16 86 16 86 +1 McCrn6%92cv 1 48 48 48 -2 

ConEd 9*04 9J 20 92* 92 92 + * McOra 7%M 14.1 M S3* D* 53*-1 

CW1NG9S958J 1 ID* 161* ID* McCro 7*95 1+3 31 54% 54* 54* 

CnNG9*95 9. 11 103% ID ID -1 Mddd4*91CV 30 84% 84% 84%+lft 

[CnPW 5*96 46 2 68 68 68 ..... JAcGH3ft92cv S 57ft 57ft 57ft I 


9-+>ealt In flat, x— Matured bands, ncgattobiutv Impaired by maturity. nd-^Next day 
d * n '5 rv - "Zr^ x tn-Forrtm Issue sxJMect to Jnterost eguallatton tax. 

cv-Converttbte band. 


Cash Prices I Foreign Exchange 


5 57ft 57ft 57ft. 


CnPw8VW9A 2 86% 86% 86% - % Mellon 6SB9 64 38 99* 99ft 99ft 

CnPw llftM 142 13 IP 110*111 -I MeM4fts96cv 3 84 14 04 - % 


CnPwlVADlOJ 36110* 110* 110*- * Merck 7ftS5 7A 25100* in 100*....- ^ » red. Chi- loiA 3J& 

CnPw 9*80 9 J 10 104% 104% 104%+t MGM9S92 « 91* 9M6 91*- * off W?VlK ST™ »S 

CnPw lTViflO IOJ 25 III* 1T1* 111*- * MGMWM1U 11 89ft 89* 89*-* oSfc No! 2 Oil ^ ." IjS 

CttAIr 3%92 Cv ZM» 4Jk 4W6- * MGM10%S96U. 27 W* 95* 95*- ft Soybeans, No. 1 vaL, Bu.. . 4131 

011116*79 48 ) 97% 97% 97% +1% MGM 9fts86 102 23 95ft 95* 95*..... Rtf, No. 2. MplL, bu.... 3Jn 

CflIHR 7*79102 30 7» ■**“ ° « n u o ^ — ”• 


Fttday, Aug. i, 1976 

(Prices In N.Y. unless otherwise noted.) 

Am. 6 Au 

Wheat. No. 2 red. CbU bu S 3436%n $ 3.1 

Cura, No. X CM., bo 2.90*o 2-5 

Oafs. Me. 2 ChU bu. 1JS* U 

Soybeans, No. 1 veL, bu.. . 4I3%I> 41 


NEW YORK (AP) — Friday Foreign 
exchange In dollars and decimals of ■ 
dollar. New York prices at 2 am. 

Frt. Thor. 


73ft 73ft + % MkfrB 7512 43 9 84 S3 84 +2 Flour, gluten, 2 lbs:, net.. .1200 

106ft MldlB 9 JOB 9. 20 106ft 106ft 106ft Sugar, raw world, lb. USD 

CDapL TVfil CV 13 00ft n 80* +1 MlcG 10*82 14 15106* 106*106*-* S ugar, raw (domestic) ... .12W 

SapL4%92cv 380 57% 56* 57 + % Mldltt 8s» 1X3 26 65* AS 65*+* pitfec. Co omWa, lb. 184%o 

G0W45S82M4A 4 43ft 43ft 43ft + * MbuOL 6s8S 9. 2 6M 66ft 66*..... CnoA, Uttla. Ita. l-03n 


CflIHR 7*79 102 30 JM 
CttT110%D9J 12 M7 
CoopL 7%91 cv 13 Mb 80. 


C0U$6JstOM4J 4 43ft 43ft 43*+* MbvtSL 6s85 9. 2 66* 66ft 66*....., — 

ZronoW* 9-1 19 78% 77 77 -% MMM 8^)5 4 45 103ft ID ID - ft Cucoa, My°a , lb ... ....... 1.10%n 

Crane BsS5 44 23 93 95ft 93 + % MKT5%33f 29 1J 10 10 ..... | tt "’" T 'IS 

CrdF W%81142 27 99% 99% 99% MPcCpOrtSev 1 152% 152% 152%+ % | 

QOCM 43Ss94 44 D 99* 99ft 99* MP«e4*90 46 17 64% 64* 64%+% 

CrZ 8*2000 49 2 HO MO 100 -1 MP8C4*90T .. 2 «ft 62% 62% 

Cuta-mws .. 3.104% M2%nn%- ft MPOC4UK45 4 50 50 SO,—.. 

DPF5%87 CV S* 65 63% 63% -1% JMPBC 4*aW 

Dart4VS97 cv 1 80 00 80 MPac4ft» 


jm BawMoteran 2?p8 1 S lawita , . 
SI Canuaantanfc . 182J91 Isuddoat Zndcn- 


«5 CaaKGurenl 89 M Hryssen Kutfte M auuncShs 

rtf Tfi 1 Ufiannn »■ 


VILaOvQ) 4J6 

^ BOND FUN D5 

2MJB AsGs&Sd ttW 2f% + f3 

._»! Bontar HW 2220 21 — SJf 


DaycSttN cv 23 68% 6B% 66%+ % MoPK5sUt 


DaycodsN cv 
Ds vc 6*96 CV 
DayP3s7BAX4 


M0A144SSL4 


17 64% 64* A4%* % SfeetV, JoUtf, pH* 35-00 

2 62% 62% 62% Jd,Et ' ‘'“’mctAL* 36 ^ 

T A* tm'i *" .'. iata 

I 45% 45% -45% stunt, scrap. No. I bury 

1 46% 46% 46% P^deflvery.lM ... 85.00 

6100ft 99% 100ft-l Antinrtny.lC. 1^8 


4 85% ©A £%..... I Mebil 0%0I 85 65 99ft 99% 99ft I Plattmrm. Trey at ........19LOO, 


6 87ft 87* 87*— SH 


Desv 5VW1 cv 11 109 100% T08%-1 


MobO 7*01 4 ID 91 ■ 92 + % 
MohO 12589 or 51111% 110* 111%+!% 


Copper, elect, lb. .74ft 

Load, lb ...; mm .2S 


" •Spank# ' w.j splltere. ; 

a'gs-Mn 

i«|nams 


jmS Daftnler Ben -D4S0 Vclfcswigsn 
roS Dgotseta Bank m» Veba 
y Orator Bank 2D JO All tour Vers 
« Fartea Bayer 125 JO Bam Yawn 
353% Farben Ugate 480 Hooch-** Br 
ll? H*«*stef Fa* 13450 MvnrtRcfcNn 
TW M a raieawru 3S4J0 Ericsson 
aai% MWGaM tnfl ft 235 EsrstaD 
■'aS «»%«»« >1-50 j 

'll JOHANNESBURG 

7? - ■ (in 5«dti African reads) 


■425 DeBeera 
2ns Blrreois 
® ERtadPnw 
^ Fr StGadntt 
555 Hjstte, • 
^ Prw Brand. 


XJB Pres Stem 
400 automata 
4.15 Wpnsn 
TJ3S WDrtefonWn 
WJ5 WDeop 
n 20 . 


WJO Otitwh....... tt« 12YL -4J 

12540 DrenHBd II. WJ1 lift -1X9 

<22 ExcEfator 21 J6 19ft - 92 

2W FeriibcBPP 9JD 9* -1J 

416 BOeatloc ll# .ja.— K 

375 Hatt«*s 17 J1 16ft- — SS 

lOJJ IKAtodeC (a) »■» 1f% — X6 

tarisals «-g 2S‘”?5 

JHanl 31-67 30ft —48 

JHanSaC 1730 16% —46 

Mute? 22.15 22% -+ U 

MttftenlBl- KJT Wi +X2 

PacAnl lSJB ■— WL5 

HJOgpiiriS 12J1 'lift -13 

X20 StafcWSec I..,,, ' 2 X - 8 

XWUSUFE 1M4 11 •— M 

aa «SP!SSft« 


DeW»5’AMor 73 tM 83* 83*..... MrPN4*815J 1* Wt 86% M*;.... Q^cWlW.6 lb. to. ... -116J0 

OctEd 3*80X9 2 82% 82% 82% MrdW9*90 9. 1 102% 102% M2%+ ft «™inOT inarts, lb. 44 

DteEdS4M44 3 64ft 64ft 6<* MntW9%«39.1 15 IW 1W 1« ...... Silver, « J^nr (H. 427^ 

-DetElI6896 93 4 64ft 64ft 64ft+ft Moron 4*»CV 5 87% 87% 87%+ ft Si Hi iStfem'lh!'’" J7 

-DefEd9s99 IX 10 90ft Mft 90%+ ft Morgan 8s86 X 48 M0% 100* 100*- % Ztoo prime 

OtGd 4IS$ 10-1 M Mft «*' am- ft MtSTl 7*11 84 15 88* *8* «*+ * Woo , 

« Hr ns. hu.-il imftI euvio I rin vnu-MW-.ilfc IIBW, is. i« 


DotEd 3*80X9 
OtfED2M444 
DetEd6896 92 


2 82% 82% 82% MrdW9*90 9. 

3 64ft 64ft 6<ft MntW9%839.1 

4 64ft 64ft 64ft+ ft Moron 4*98 CV 


« 3.11% Arwatlna (peso) 

2.91* AwtrelU (dollar) 

1J1* Austria (schilling) 

412 Botoltnn (Irene) 

3_o2 Brazil (cruzeiro) 

.1210 Britain (pound) 

.1130 30 Day Futures 
.1260 60 Day Futures 

1-84* 90 Day Futures 
.99 Canada (dollar) 

14)6% Columbia (peso) 

1.10 Denmark (krone) 

M France (Irene) 

354)0 Holland (guilder) 

3400 Hong Kong I dollar) 

Israel (pound) 

180-00 Italy (lire) 

21400 Japan (ran) 

Mexico (peso) 

85.00 Norway (bone) 

UB Portugal (escudo) 

19000 South Africa (rand) 

-74% Spain (peseta) 

JS Sweden (krona) 

11400 Switzerland (franc) 

At Venezuela ) bolivar) 

425 V9. Germany (ddimark) 

4-15S7 

27 _ _ 


JOSS JOSS 

1.245D 1-2425 

.0540 .0457 

-025600 -0255BC 


-3705 
.2050 

1275 

.001 210 .001202 
.003420 4)03420 


1.1535 1.1530 

JI50 4)147 
2260 >M) 

.4040 .4035 

ttk .2335 
J950 2935 


Drffid 8%D 9.9 
DetEd 7*01 9-8 


21 81ft 61ft Oft+% MtSfl 9*129.1 
4 25% 74 75% +2% MtSTIPftlS 9. 

12 95ft 95% 95% - ft NCR 9585 U 


MJ5TI 9ft 129.1 5 ID M7% 1117%-lft 

MfSTl 9*15 9. 3 M7* WA W7*+ ft 

DriEd 9*041^4 12 95ft 95% 95% - ft NCR 9s8S U 70 lffA WJft WJft+lft 
Dri£12%791U 5112 110% 112 +7% NCashfaOS cv S 80ft SOU 80ft + ft , 

- DriE 12ft6211i 12 114 113ft 114 +ft NCftvSftB or » 55 S 55 ...... 

• DtGfcr 5*93 X7 9 66 66 66 + ft NDIri4%92 cv 22M5 M3% t« + % I 

DUUng 9*499 cv 9 M6% 106% 106%- % MHorti A496CV 14 41 41 41 ..... 

Dow 8*2000 8J TOttBft 702ft IDft- ft N I ntJSftffl CV 92 61 60 60 -2 

Dow L92000L7 10 RQ* M2* U2ft+ ft Nlnd MS99 1U 1 88% 88% B8%-2% 
DowTfttfB L3 25 92 91* 91*+% NMdFdftMcv 23 68ft 68 68ft- ft j 


(a) EX«DfVlDHlD. 
z NoT AVAILABLE. . 
(tiler! TTmndjry’i dost. 


Dow8%s05 8.4 35 700ft 700% 100ft- ft 
duRont 8417.8 65 UQft MM 1Q2%+1 


NEnT 9%10 9. 
NJBTI 3VU8 X 


5 705% 105% 105% 

7 0 63 63 - ft 


duPtL6s04X3 15 MC 101ft 161ft -2% NJBTlTftim 3 83% 87% 87% 


SS^TB 7. 15 'raft «% 'si*-* IdNYH 4%tf "T. » 4% 4% V%- ft 

S3SSSS iSSStSi mm >1 C m SS:r 


18 1D% 161% in%. NYBkS 8s81 79 10101 


Zurich y v .. | 

Swtesfreocn 

530 BDbGC . . 4% 

AHS Sulzcr - V.W1Q 
64 Swiss. Air Bra . 529 
L4JS Unfall HUttter . 1^ 
Li 20 Scbwz Bidcgesell X» 
tj30 Luricfa Vers 


(Bonos In poratffl .' 

• ‘ Trans 78^9 £40% . TiwsOWM ■ 

Cansols Z%s £31% ■ Traas M m 

4% War Loan . £26* i-Treas 199? 
X9is ' : ■ 

'529 -' . 

Hg BUENOS AIR£S 

Jot ' (lR0nnprtwiMH8>.-*. 


^ Foreijgn Stock Index Three Named to Parol© Unit 

*«» '" Tfritf- IW. — WASHINGTON, Aug. S.CUPD 

^Amsterdam . fiA $ ins _ wT —President Ford announced 
Brussels 7522 HJB jus _73.i5 today- his intention ^to nominate 
m SMS aw nS NX jftT three persons to serve on the 

ess* fum &» (30). 27X3 . 371 j «jM 36jj United States Parole Commis- 

a B5«B.»Bto%wcrtc craw- 

Parte ....... WA. 709.7 iii3 m 2 forf, a silver Spring, Md,, 

riiSo (nj" "I 35331 £239 357.90 '326 j 8 lawyer; Paula A. Tennant, a 

iwn IVWMIMISJ anu - m.IIC T A 


Hides, light raw. lb- 29 

Rubber Ko.1 Standard 

rib-6® oted shorts. Du... 30% 

Gas. Tan*. dHi* oaL Ml 

Fuel oil, 2 gal JZ5D , 

Itendy te Qwwmdlty Index W4 i 

Open Interest 

Friday, Aug. 6, .1976 
Thursday, Ata- 5, 1976 
Io bushels, ODD omitted.) 

Thus. 
Sales I 

Wheat 34.780 

Cota + 52,215 


Money 


DijkeP 13S79 1L4 Z7 IM 113% 114 + % 
Dupbi5%94f cv 130 27% 22ft 27* +5* 
Duq 8*2000 L6 IS ID 1» ID - ft 
OUOL9S06 18 5 101ft 181ft Mlft+ % 

ESy»4%s92cv 2 76% 76% 76% -1% 


vINYH 4 %jt. .. Jr 4% 4% 4»- * Wheat 34.780 

HffSafiY d S* S8 SS-r SS ! II!I 

NYT1 4%B 6.7 10 61ft 61% 61ft+ * -Srtemto i ! . 77J20 

NY71 9*10 L8 11 105% IK. ID + ft Soybean meal 4A3S 

NYTe»as08LS 2 94 W 94 Soybean oil 2266 

(In cunhads) 


NYTrifeOO L5 2 94 94 M ..... 

NYTI 7*11 U 25 88ft BSft 68% .+ ft 


NYDL3SI28J 


+ ft I Sugar (No. IT torlrod) . , . 


EuAirSsflCV w Sift St 51 NYTI 8*16 8J ID 100% M0% MOft Sugar (No. 12 contract)... 

” *1 ii? iL. 1L.V.VI NewM. 6995 cv 30 76% 76% 76%+% r«r« 


£2 ISSvbs lot ' (iBjuwgittnQPBB). '. • io) ^g4jgJo x »w.ffi 4 ^|6 Burlingame, Calif, lawyer; and 

1 5SISSS.* :::: 38? 'Sf Jff ^ on 

DO Get) Trigphn . . *5 ; . -r~S ilScvS. 1 u M Uu»i>i ' TI__ ld Ur. Wm n,. Cuh* TmUrranr Snhrnm- 


J^2S: Jtraolt •• . . T,l35|Astra PW 

L3E0 Hnitoz« CttfS. XSOOAfaoor 
454 CMflkoBAre 


'-.'X', 


22000 Molinas KJo 

5LD Stan ; 
54D 


76JS fpiwBdii Tins. Hi Sah d-Dov Joaao. the Senate Judiciaiy Snbcom-I 

? ^ mittfie cm Refugees. 


EaAir 4ft93'cv I 52% 52% S%+ % 
EKfld4%80 cv 5 m in 113 -2 
EIPasdriQAcv 9 0 n B 
ElPa 8%95A cv 11111 111 in +1 
EqtLf 6U90 cv 2 81% 81% 81%+ % 
Esn 9*5000 9. H 702% H2% «&%+!% 
Evans 6*94 cv 3 79ft 79ft 79ft..... 

Exxon 6s97 72 20 BM Bf 80ft 

ExXttP 9S04 L6 10 104% 1Q(% 101% - * 

ExPflJBri07J » W2ft TO* nan..,.. 


NWP 4*87 7. 

12 

70 

69% 

69% - % 

NEM 1X6581 1X9 

5 

116 

116 

116 -1 

NIMML2S859J 

10 

U 

IM 

104 

NAMg5%79B0 
NaAPfl 4$92 Cir 

10 

80 

79* 

» .. .. 

6 

71* 

71* 

71*- % 


KeNGS 9S85 L6 28 JM* IM 10**+ * 
NOPOC 36*7 9. 2 33* 33* 33*+ % 

NoPaC 3S47T .. 10 33 32* 32*- * 

Ntrtn>4ft87cv 11 la% 129% 129%-1 


Cocoa 

eoffw 

Cower 

Lire hogs 

Shell coos .... 
Orange Juice ... 
Lire beef caHIo 

Platinum 

surer 

Potatoes 

Pork bellies 
Wool 


«EW YOgC^AP}— Moooy rates tor Friday. 

•3250 Wsrantf rats' 5%. 

81X7 Federal funds market rats 5% high, 5 

3-16 low. 5 3-16 efts. 

t Dealer's commercial paper 30-180 nays. 

Sites*. ...» 

Commercial paper placed - hr Aram 
company 30-270 days SM. 

. uu Banters aasentance rate&deaJor 
1 *“■ Hons 3«H9 d«s SJ042X MtoBJ- 
, ,° PEI ? 35-525, 90-119 dm W0-5JB, 120-179 days 
Mass 5JD-5.60, 180-270 day* 5JS4J5. 

CertltkatK of denKlt 4MB dns 5£%. 
60-89 dm 5%-5Vi, 90-119 days 5ft- 5ft, 120- 
179 dan 5*8*5. 180360 danSHft. 
Telerate money maript index 5J4, ibi- 
73ABA (jtgngnl tram Thursday, up JK tor week. 
43i936 

4&B GOLD 

]i57^i | 

8,777 By The Associated Press 

4.70 Selected world uld prices Friday. 

48.127 London: Morning fixing $112.80. BP Sftit; 
7,959 aflrmoon llriis 5IT2J0. up IS,®. 

3J69 Paris: Ahernoon market quotation 11X06 

X681 op aui. 

an Fraakf-iExtao *11123 , up 5026 . 

5,924 Zurich; .4t?JD bid up S0J5, $1133 
129,104 : astod. Ir*). c Harmoon base price, dew 
7«9 1 Y0rt ST1X3, UP SOJO. „ o 
4278 EngelhHil sailing prices New YorK *113J0» 
64 UP SIL2X 













THE TOW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST* 7, 1976 = 


American Stock Exchange Transactions: Consolidated 


ma Slock* and Diw. Sain Net 

High low in Dollars P.E 100‘s High Low Last Chg- 


FRIDAY, AUGUST 4. 1974 


, QJ . stacks and Olv Sain Net i«4 Stocks and Div. Sales ' Nell 1976 Stodu- and Ofe Mg'. ... H«t 

High Low S ^^!lars 'pS(rt High Low Last 0*0 Hion Low in Dollars p/e ioo's-mk* Law Last Cho Ht*i low MJMlan -P/E W» HWi Low Leaf Cha. 


- 1976- stocks and dv, sales . 

. High LOW tn Mian . «*/E lOO'S.High L > 




A— B— C— D 

8* 4 A&EPIost PS 17?'. 7% 7?i- ft 


Day's — Year to Date — 

Sales Thursday Year Ago 1974 W7S 

1,703,240 1.S2MJ0 'lHKT^KM 138,980.235 377,936.045 


13% 6% CuWeCp .28 « 7 12V. 12 12 - ft 

4% 114 curtls .Math 10 3 1 * 1 + Vi 


12’k 7 AARCB .30 6 
8ft 4V. AAVCos J2 4 
1% 11-14 ADM Indus! .. 
9 Vm AtC Photo .. 


11 9*. 9ft 9ft- % 

3 6 ft 4 % 6 ' u - ft 

1 1116 11-16 11-14 

5 3ft 2 2ft 


1976 Stocks and Diw. Sales 


12. i m^rTsOi 4 » l! * wJ-l H.0h LOW inOollars P/E 100'S High Low- Last Chfl 

Uft 10% AVCCo .10 3 2 U’« lift lift- % — — 3 * 7 


134 4ft AVXCP -12e U 1 12ft 12* 12*4 a- ft 
84 S’ 1 . AbrdMf ,40b 59 M 44 A% J% - ft 


8ft 44 Action JOe 5 3 44 6’k 6ft-‘ % 


114 124 BrewerC -80 .. A 13* 134 134 | 

14 2Yg BraDart Ind 5 5 3 3 3 


■ffft 

2 Adam Russi 

9 

19 

VA 

3ft 

VA- 

ft 

12% 

95i Adobeon .16 18 

5 

11% 

lift 

lift- 

ft 

7 

1 Aegis Carp 

7 

103 

1% 

1ft 

1ft + 

ft 

8% 

4% AsroFlo .ISe 

3 

13 

5% 

5% 

5ft + 

ft 

3ft 


, m 

2 

V* 

1% 

1ft.. 

mmB 

3ft 

1ft AfftICap .061 

.. 

10 

2% 

VA 

2ft.. 

... 


UTi 8* BrooksP Jt A 
14 2% arownco wl .. 
15*4 IKi BrnFB -52a 8 


2 Wt 1% HI* 'A 

7 1 1 4 

3 MU II* lift- Vi 


4% 3ft dWG Cp JDt 4 35 3* 3% 3V.+ * 

S’* 3% Daman Cre 5 S 3* Jft 

8 3% Damien Oil 21 2S flti 4U tf&+ V. 

-201i >J« Daniel .!» 8 1 19% 19 19 - Ik 

43% 29ft Dale Dcwnt 5 . 2 29H 29% Wt- ft 

14% 4% Dataprod IS# VS W 13% 13*+ % 

8%. 5% DavMln ,10e * 15 7 4% 4%*- % 

H'A 9% DdLabs J2.7 '5 UK UK UK 

9 6% DettwdF -54 5 18 4% 4% 4% ' 

1V-W4 Delta Co Am .. 3 11-14 11-16 11-16 +1-14 

10% 7 Denial Ez 9 58 8% W l*k+ % 


15% 10% GtoWnd JO 5 6 13% UK 7314 - % 

11% IK Gtouotr Eli 5 1 12% lift 121%+ 'A 

7 PA Glover .10e * IS 4% 4% Pm 

S 3% GltWatt J8 A-- 7- ift 4% Ph* % 

14% 10% Golden Cvd 128 14 UK 10% 10%- 
12 m GofdnWJTO 7 2Q 9% 9ft 9ft- % | 


2% % LTVCorO Wt .. in- 85% 1.1 .... 

pa m uaarge .06 7 is 2ft 2%. 


4% 3% LeMaur JO 8 * M ft Ph- % 

6'A 5% LaPotal JOe W 1 5* 55% 5ft... «« 


4* 2% GOodLS Jffr 13 


19k 7% GouldIT .11) .. 


X 

9% 

9ft 

9ft- 

% 

11% 

4 

2% 

2ft 

2%— 

... 

Si 

X 

7% 

7ft 

7%.. 

... 

r* 

y 

3% 

3% 

3ft + 

ft 

4ft 

18 

11 

10% 

11 + 


17m 


f% SftLiftAthM 6 11 ft ft 

1154 7' LStvRad J4 7 7 Ift *» 8ft- 

2U 1ft Like Shore * 41U-U 1 IHfl 1H6-* 


5% 2% GtAm Ind 4 II 5ft 5ft 3tt+ ft 

IK 2ft Gt Basin Pet .. ft 3ft 3ft 3ft- 3a 


37ft 28ft GtUcCh JIM 17 32 31ft 32 + ft 

5ft 4* GtLakR J2r 20 I S 5 5 + ft - 


2ft lft Let Natl 
4ft 3 Lehigh Pres 5 
9 OftLsviBIrt J4 6 


1 ift 1ft 1ft.,..:. 

1 «, ; ift ift- -ft 1 
1 7ft :7ft 7ft- ft, 


3- 2 Buehfor <Co 9 30 2ft 2ft 2ft + ft I 

5 3 BUkte Inc 6 1 3ft 3*fa 3ft + ft I 


• S'.J 4ft AtttIHSP 1.40 1 

10ft AK AffllPito .48 5 

Sft 3ft AlterSIx .20 5 

ift 3 Aiken Ind 7 

16ft lift Alan Wood 


2 8ft fift 8ft + Va 

1 9% 9ft 9ft- ft 

4 5*% 5 5ft + ft 

2 3ft 3ft 3ft- ft 

1 12 lift lift- ft 


14ft 12ft Bundy 1.08 7 4 15ft 15ft 15ft 

5*<* 3ft Burgess Ind 5 12 Ift ; 3ft 3ft- ft 


13 lift BurtngFd 5 
12 Bft Bumsint 7 
12ft 10ft Butlerlnt -SO 6 


11 12ft 12ft 12ft + ft 
7 Ift Ift 8ft- ft 
T 12 12 12 + ft 


2ft 1 Designer Jw .. 
8ft 3ft DevCO Am 9 
4 ft 3ft Didbold VC .. 
8ft Ift Digicon inc 8 
ift 11-16 Modes me ... 


2 Jft 7ft 1ft- w 

1 4ft ift ift- ft 

3 5ft 5ft 5ft + ft 


Oft Oiversev .54 8 9 lift lift Uft 


30ft lift BUtteSG Oil A 29 27ft 21ft 21ft- ft 


70ft 4ft Dlxllvn -40e 1 
•ft 32 Dome Pefrt 10 


4ft 1ft Alaska Alrl 3 10 5ft 5ft 5ft- ft 
3ft 7ft AlbaWa JJ5e 4 • 2 7ft 2Vi 2ft...... 


9ft Oft Aksiac .15e 6 
7ft 4ft Altec CO wt .. 


3 .4ft Oft 6ft- ft 
7 Jft T 7ft- ft 


20 8>/i CKPet -15a V 21 14ft lift .14 + ft 

9ft Oft CHB Food 4 1 7ft 7ft 7ft- ft 


7ft 5ft Dankenv. -24 3 
lift Ift Downey -24 5 


7ft ift AlleghY Afri .. 16 4 5T» 6 ...... 

3?) 1ft AllcgA wto .. 3 2ft 2ft 2ft 


7 1ft CHCCp , JOT 3 
ift Tfi CMt Corp 5 


7 5ft 5ft 5ft... . ... 

10 2ft 2K 2ft- ft 


2 S 5 r 2 P„ % *5 52 52 S“ "I w* ^ dtofi^^o 5 3 m m wk+ % 

** 3 . ' ,S'"'r 113-141 5.16DIB1IHI JKe 5 ID 4ft 17-16 17-16 

'9ft ^ J ” 1JS " I 23ft 14ft DuntxPd .» 5 2 lift lift 14ft+ ft 


1 .... 

... 

14ft... 


8 ... 


41ft... 


21%+ 

ft 

5ft. . 


llft+ 

17ft... 

ft 


4ft 2ft Greenmail 5 
7ft iftGREH JO 1 
7ft 2ft Greyhd C 31 
tPA Oft GrowC JXb 11 


A 3ft 3ft 3ft f 

7 5ft 5ft Sft- ft 

7 . 7ft 7ft 7ft 

« Ift Ift 8ft- ft 


7ft Sft LwrfaBF J4 6 1 Sft '5ft 5ft + ft 

ift 2ft Ltaertn An 32 -3- 3ft » 


12ft Soundsn, JO 
Oft SoestCad Jfi 
lOftSCLOP* 1-02 
llftSCUpf 1-06 
lift SCUpf 1JB 
12ft SCl.Tpt .1.19 
15ft 5C5JB* MS 
UK SCUpl 2 JO 
24ft SCOJpl 2J0 
23ft SCUM 2-21 
9 50WSSt Aid 
2ft SWIGFIn .10 
5 Spartok JO 


tSftSoector .TOe. 
ift speddP .in 
ft Speizmn Ind 
.3% Soemr -06e 
Aft SoencrF J2 
4ft 5oientcx J8 
-5ft ShrftttUwd 
UftStOAlHanc 1 
13ft SWCoosa- JO 
3ft SMMetl JDt 
9 StdMolA J8 
3ft StdPsc Corn, 
ft SWPrudwt 

Bft Shone .12 


lift Sft Uovds Elec 10 U 7* m 7*- ft 

3 7ft LodoeS Jh 5 .34 2ft 2ft 2ft. — .. 


2ft Ift Gruen bid 138 5 Ift 1ft Tft 

7ft 5 -Guilford JO A - 1 6ft 6ft M..-.,., 


8ft 4ftUwFT7wwt.. 70 Sft .« g%- ft 
3 Ift Logistic JBe 4 17 2ft Ift *L-... 


34ft 27 GtfOllCan 7 8 . 6 20ft J8ft 28ft- ft 
7ft 3ft Glfsfrm LO . .. 14 4ft - 4% 4ft- ft 


WJ 9 LaGenSv J6' 7 W.1M.1M Wi+.ft 

27 19ft LOUtaCt 1 JD 7 5 26ft 26ft 26ft...... 

TX 7 Lynch Corp .. .2.5ft 5ft. 75ft 


10ft ‘ Sft 'HaltsMot J0 5 
5ft 3ft HamoO .15* A 


5 9ft W 9ft- - ft 
2 1ft 4ft 4ft 


Oft 3ft Harman Ind. 4 U Oft Sft 6ft+ ft 

12ft 8ft HanvrSh JO 4 3 9ft 9ft Oft ...... 


M— N— O— P 

mt lift MFBCp JO S » 17 ft 17 ft 17 ft- ft 


2 ft AtldArt Ind . . 
1754 14 AJId Thrm.H 0 6 


6 15% IS IS - ft 


4 2ft HarvrSq RH .. 31 3ft 3ft 3%- ft 

21ft 14ft Harland M It 24 20 19% 20 


3ft 2ft AAPQ Video .- 3 3ft Ift 3ft..<— 
SK 7 MWA JOb 7 Z <ft fft «*+ Hi 


7 

1M6 Altec Cora 13 

25 

1ft 

1 

1 ... 


1S-1A 

% AJtecCp wt .. 

2 

5-16 

5-16 

5-16... 


lift 

8W AlterFds JO 14 

7 

8% 

8% 

B% + 

ft 

14% 

TA AMAX wt 

7 

PA 

9ft 

9%... 

• • 

Pi 


27 

Th 

2ft 

■2ft- 

ft 

Sft 

6 AmBlltrt .SO 6 

26 

Sft 

Sft 

8ft + 

ft 

10% 

7 AmBusP .26 10 

5 

7% 

7% 

7%... 


% 

ft ACcnMlg wt .. 

1 

ft 

ft 

ft... 


7% 

S AControi .44 Tl 

1 

5* 

5ft 

5ft- 

ft 

4% 

1ft Am F fetch .. 

39 

1% 

1ft 

1ft... 

• • 

lift 

5% AGarPd J4 .. 

3 

6 

6 

6 ... 

.a 

4% 


1 

3ft 

Sft 

3ft- 

ft 

lft% 

10% AMaizeA .40 3 

9 

11 

10% 

10% - 

ft 



23 

4% 

4 

4 ... 




2 

Aft 

Aft 

Aft- 

ft 

7% 

3% ASifEa .lit 5 

.7 

Sft 

5% 

5%... 


15ft 

10ft AmSriE -Me- 19 

29 

13 

17ft 

13 + 

>4 

4ft 

2% AmTec -OSe .. 

4 

3ft 

3ft 

3ft... 

.. 


10ft 6% CSECD J2 9 
9 5ft CsMam Gn 5 
Oft 4ft CoateA .10* 3 


2 5ft 5ft 5K 

3 4ft 4ft 4ft 


14ft Harm Job 5 ID 19ft 19ft 19ft 


16ft 12ft Caldor JSb a 11 13ft 73ft 13ft- ft 


6ft 2ft Dynktn ,«e 10 23 1ft 4ft 4ft 

Bft 3ft DynAmer 7 24 6ft 6 6ft + ft 


7ft 4ft KarHdZdv 


3 4ft 4ft 4ft. — .. 


VA % Macrad Ind » .. • 7 % 1W ll-14-l-l* 
15ft 13% MePbS 1-32 7 2.141%. M «ft+ 1% 


10ft Stars** M* 
13-16 Start Ehdr 
. ift 5iertExt M 
7ft StnrtW .10* 
9 SueAm -34 
. ft Summit Org 
13ft SunEtet J8 
■ Sft Sundanc -Mb 
Oft SucFdSv J2 
2ft Superor .10* 
4 Sudndi .12b 
Sft SwsSutt Mf 
,lft Suwiihaiia 
ft SuTrMtg wt 
24 Syntax JO 
13ft SyscoCo -29 
5ft System Eng 


Aft 3ft Calcomp .. 
75ft 70ft CatPrtCm 1-70 


35 5ft 5ft 5ft+ ft 
0 13ft 13% 13% 


B% Aft CamcolKNC - ft?' ft , %ft 4ft- , 


lift 8 Dyndia 31 44. 9ft 9 91%+ ft 

E— F—G-H 

3ft Ift EAC In ' 5 5 2ft 2ft _2!V 


Tift 18 IhartzM .l5e 12 30 11% lift lift- ft 

1% ft Harvey Grp 49 1 7W6. 1V16 1W6...... 


4ft 2ft Moran* Mrt ..• t~ 3 3 

ift 3% MantlLt* M 9 13 4ft 4, 


3-' 

4ft + -ft 


8% 3ft Hasbro Ind ' 5 37 7 7 + ft 

4% 3 HawalA .Mr 25 U 4% 4ft. PA* ft 


2 1 3-14 Mar induq B <u 17 1ft 1 S-MT5-W- 1-16 
24ft It MarkCtt JB 6 • 2M 22%. 23M + .-.ft i 


11% ldft ELT 477* 10 11 1Z lift lift 

2ft 1 Eagle doth .. 15 1ft ift 1ft- Wr 


7ft 5 Hearn Ohm 7 25 5ft 5ft 5ft 

3ft 3ft HaatthM JO .S 5 5ft 5ft 5ft+ ft 


10>4 sa Marlene ind 4 
6 3ft Marshall Fd. - 


.2 6ft 4ft 
2 5ft 5ft- 


1PA 13% EarthRes 7 7 33 77% 77ft 17ft 


3% 1ft Hahtfck JBe 73 26 1% 1ft 1%+ % 

2U 1 Heitmn Mtg .. 17 Tft ift 1ft 


16ft HiClMcd -50 9 3 14ft 14ft 14ft......-| 


4BU 39ft Cdn SunrOil 11 32 45 44% 44% 

3ft -I. Caoehart Co .. 108 1 - 1 1 - ft 


29ft 17% Carbon .Me 6 57 22ft 21% 22%+ ft 

8ft S'- Caress* -30 5 61 Sft 5ft Sft + ft 


6 3% EszorE JD» 4 1 5ft I 

10% 6 Ecodyne JHe 7 x7 flV V 

39ft 22ft Edgiton, JOr 8 148 39ft 39 

4% 2 Ectmos Cp - 2 2ft 7 

11 7ft EDO- Curp 8 45 9 I 

91% 4ft EkorCh .10 8 Xl2 7ft 7 

7 4ft EIHose JOr 12 3 5ft 5 


1 5ft 5ft 5ft- ft 

x7 9% 9ft 9ft 

148 39% 39 39ft + ft 

2 2ft 2ft 2ft; 


10% 8ft AmUflS J9e .. 12 10ft 10ft 10% 


14ft 

9 AM 1C Corp 

a 

26 

Uft 

14% 

14ft + 

ft 

Sft 

Z% Andre R J71 11 

1 

2% 

2% 

2%.- 


2ft 

Sft AngtaC .12e 

7 

3 

2% 

2% 

2% + 

ft 

TA 

3ft Anken JO- 

7 

2 

6% 

6ft 

6ft- 

% 

9 

4% Anthony .19t 

5 

7 

7ft 

6ft 

7 .. 

tl . 

4 

1ft Applid Data 

12 

15 

J% 

3ft 

3%.. 


74ft 

17% AaultCa .X 15 

15 

30% 

19% 

19% - 

ft 

7ft 

4% ArirCL .lOe 26 

13 

4ft 

4ft 

4ft... 

„ , 


4% ArzCol pf .48 

mm 

1 

Sft 

5ft 

5ft.. 



lift' 

7% ArminCD .12 

4 

35 

Sft 

8% 

8%... 


Sft 

3ft Arrow Elect 

7 

18 

3ft 

3% 

g%... 


6 

4 Arundel 


14 

Sft 

5ft 

5ft + 

ft 

16% 

7% Assmera .35 

8 

W 

10 

9% 

9ft* 

ft 

17% 

9 Ash IOC JOa 

8 

2 

9ft 

9ft 

9ft- 

% 

2% 

% Askln Svc 

4 

1 

1ft 

1ft 

lft + 

ft 

4 


11 

4 

3% 

Th 

3ft- 

V* 



3 

2 

.9% 

5% 

Sft- 

ft 

Ift 

% Atco lnd 

94 

5 

15-16 

15-16 

15-16... 

-.a 

3% 

ft AtIRIchf wt 

.. 

8 

1% 

1* 

1%... 


4% 

3% A If CMS n 

8 


8 4ft 3* 4/1- 

3 

1% 

1% AtlasCp wt 


40 

3 

2* 

3 + 

ft 


74ft 64 Cannar 1.40 15 729 76ft 76% 76% + ft 

15% 11% CeroPteJ lb I 13 I5<A 15 15</i- % 

164*. 13ft CasFd 1.20a .. 2 )6ft 76V. 16ft- % 

2 1 .. ft CrtluCraft a 2 1% 1% l%+ ft 

38% 34% CenM of 3.50 .. z4TO 37 36% 37 + % 

Sft 4%,CenTS«C -<0e .. 3 5ft Sft Sft 


V 

8% 

9 + 

1 

7% 

7 

7ft... 


5% 

5% 

5*+ 

ft 

2* 

2ft 

2ft- 

% 

13 

12* 

12% - 

% 


7% 3% Hfghlnd Cap .. 

6% 3ft Hillhavn J2 6 
13*/. 7 Htotmlc JO 11 

3% • 2 Holly Corp 5 
8% 4ft. Ham Hardrt .. 
8% 5% KospM JOc 12 


Sft 4% Marshal Ind 5 J 7ft 7ft 7ft+ ft 

IB'.'i Aft Maslnd -40a 4 .3 8ft 8% JH6- % 


T 5% 5% 5%+ ft I 

7 5% 5%' S'*- % ■ 

4 7H 7ft 7ft+ % j 

6 2ft 2ft 2ft ! 

3 7% 7% 7% I 


37ft 23ft Masneftn JO A 14 32ft 32 . 32ft + Yt 
7% i MeolBro .12 7 5 Sft 5ft 5ft- ft 


5ft 3% McCutO Ht 13 44 3% 3ft 3ft...... 


19ft 13*4 McDonh .10 5 15 18% 18ft Ttft- % 


U Aft Mclntsh .70 6* 
2ft 1% McKean Co .. 


O' 13% 13 13 - ft 

7 Ift ' 1%- ' l%+ ft 


5-16 VIA HomMtg wt — 17 3-32 1-16 1-16 - 

14 11% Hofd In 1^0 9 1 127. I2ft 12ft + ft 


2 4% Oft ift -"ft I 13ft UPOMeansF 1.01 4 12 lift lift lift- — •• 


8' 7 79% 19 
72 I -7ft. . 7' -• 
a lift iv • 
... 1 lift -IV 
... 1 12ft 12 - 

.. ;-2 13ft 13 .. 

• 4 14ft 16 . 

.. . 1 lift 15. 

.. 2 25ft 35 ' 

V. 4 25% 2J . . 

6 4 19ft 99 

5 M 2ft: 2 *. 

7 .1 9ft . ; 

... 3 8ft f . 

12 :i 1ft 1 . 

.. 15 ‘1ft 1 • 

.. 4 «iT-| 

3 11%:! 

6 1 Aft 4- 

AC D 5ft - .. 

$ 1 16% 

8 4 15% .1 -- 

• i m :• 

,4 6 13ft 2 . 

A -32 Oft — .• 

3 *n 
19 33 13ft V 
A -2 11-1 : 

11 . 20 Ift 
-9 2 2% 

t H 7ft 

9 9 lift ‘ . 

T 2 75-16-1 * 

10 . 3 16% •_ 

6 : 3 Uft ' • 

7 28 lift' ' v- 

4.-4 Jft . 
6 27 5% , ' 

17 ‘4 S ' 

.. ' 5 2ft-. 

.70 e-14 

13 1311 28ft •- 

A 3 Uft i 

.. 38 8ft- - 


•*% •»*' 

V. - 




A 

vF .?%•■ 
.^ioSTfe-. 
.*■ ffc- 

-• .-Si.. 

T VJ& 


'+t» • 

r- . :*♦- 
- 


11% 12ft EledndcA 1 14 

Tft 5% EnrgvRes 7 

9% «’-» EmstEC .56 5 

2ft 1ft Era ind 2» 


3% Tu Century Fac 8 
B% 4 Cenvfll .ISe .. 
21ft 18ft CerM pf2JS .. 
2% Ift Certified Co .. 
1% ft Certran Cp .. 
7% ift Cetec Carp 12 


■ h 2ft 2ft TA 

1 7ft 7ft 7% - ft 

386 20% 20 20 - % 

2 Ift 1ft 1ft 

. 4 ft 11-16 % 

3 Tft 1% 1ft 


8ft 6ft EssexOl J8 6 


7ft EvonAT .1ST 8 7 9ft 9 


lfr, 

16 

16 .. 


7ft 

6% 

6*- 

’ft 

Bft 

B* 

■*... 


1% 

1% 

1H- 

'ft 

8% 

Bft 

8ft- 

ft 

7% 

7ft 

7% - 

ft 

9ft 

9 

9 - 

ft 


8ft 4% HousRan JO 5 2 5 5 5 + ft 

7% 1ft HOUSeVf 32 8 10 5ft Sft 5%..-... 


8 Pk Medalst .«b 6 
2% 15-16 Medaln Gna .. 


3 7ft 7ft Tft + ft 
8 1ft 1% 1%- % 


lift 6% HoapMtr In 29 10 6% 6% 6%- ft 

46 32% HouOflM JO 20 232 54ft 53ft 51% 

22ft 15 HowefC JOe 5 10 15 15 15 


9*6 Sft Medenoo .12 6 20 tv* .7ft 8%+ ft 

Aft 2te Mtdfiekl Cp 2 72 4% 6 « - ft. 


37 28ft Hubei IB 1JO 9 2 30 30 30 .... 

51 41 Hub pTA 1.75 .. 1 44 44 41 - 1ft 


5% 2 FDIInc .Ole 75 26 3ft 3% 3%+ ft 


Sft Ift Hudson Gen .. 1 3 3 3 

11% 33% Hud BO MO 10 5 38ft 38ft 38ft- ft 


aft 3% Chomo Horn .. 256 1% 4% 4**+ % 

6ft 3ft Chartr Med 5 3 4% 4% 4% - ft 


6% 4ft Fab ten JO 30 

3 1% FatrTex Mil .. 

5% 2ft Falrtld Nob .. 

«ft 2ft FalrmC .14c 2 


6 1ft 4ft 4ft 

l ift ift 1ft. 

4 2ft 2ft 2ft - ft 

1 3% 3% 3ft- % 


10% 4 H liftman .10a .. 20 10% 9% 10% 

23 Vi 17% HuskvO .80 5 19 19% 18ft 18ft- ft 


5ft 3% Hvcd Inc 


ift 2ft etiem Exp 6 
22ft 15ft QllRIvt M0 11 
12% 8% Chteftn Dev 21 


6 3 2ft 3 + ft 
3 22% 22 22%+ % 

5 10ft 10% 10% - ft 


25ft 20% Falcons .40 < 41 23% 23ft 23ft 

8ft 4ft FemDoIr .14 6 A Sft Sft Sft+.ft 


17ft 11% Child world 10 45 17% 17 17%+ % 


2ft 1% Fash Fabric 25 2 Ift 1ft 1ft 

14% 12ft FedMart .40 6 46 U 12% 13 


18% 12ft Augattnc .15 22 10 17% T7ft 17ft + ft 


3 . 1% Christian Co 7 

6ft 4% Cinema Fiv 7 
z% 1% Cinerama 


7 2ft 2% 2ft 


13ft 11 FedRIfy 1.74 9 3 12% 12% 12%...... 

4% 4ft Fed Resrce* .. 32 5 ift 5 + ft 


I— J— K— L 

10% 4% 1CMR JW .. 41 1% 4ft 4ft + % 

4ft 3ft ISCFhnl JO 17 3 4ft 4ft 4ft+ ft 

1% % m Com ... I 9-16 M6 9-16-1*16 

36% 22 ImpOnA .80 12 184 22% 22 22%- ft 


3% 2% Inarco 


10 3% 3ft 3ft- 


7% 5% ClrtieK 32 7 J Aft Oft Oft i 

8% PA Citation JQb .. 13 7 7 7 - ft 


12ft 8 Felmnt .12* 55 55 12 lift 12 + ft 

3ft 1% Flbrebrd wt.. 33 3 3 + ft i 


5ft 2*6 FWelco Gth .. 17 2% 2% 2%-+ ft 


Vf:» tft. Incoterm A 18* 3 10% W. 10ft 

2% ift ImflanHd wt .. 15 2% 2ft 2%- % 


lift 

6% AutoTrn .701 

8 

6 

7 

7 

7 - 

% 


2% Auto Bkto 

9 

1 

3% 

3% 

3%.. 


9* 

2% Autroaf Rad 

9 

7 

7ft 

7% 

7ft- 

ft 

44ft 

37 AutoSw .81 13 

2 

39% 

39% 

39ft + 

ft 

A 

2 AVEMC .16 

6 

2 

3ft 

3% 

3% + 

ft 

5* 

3ft Avdln Cp 

7 

15 

ift 

4ft 

4ft + 

ft 

1ft 

9-U BRTRI JOe 


1 

15-16 

15-16 15-16+1-16 

2% 

1ft BTU Eng 


1 

1ft 

1ft 

1ft- 

ft 

6ft 

4 BakerM .15t 

9 

1 

4% 

4% 

4%+ 

ft 

6% 

5 Ba IttwS J2a 


1 

Aft 

Aft 

6ft.. 


16% 

12ft BanFd 1.15e 


14 

15% 

19% 

15ft- 

ft 

1ft 

ft Bang Pun wt 


12 

1 

1 

1 .. 


11% 

6% BonrtrCH Lt 

6 

15 

Bft 

Bft 

Bft- 


5* 

3* Banner .06 

5 

25 

4ft 

4ft 

4ft- 

ft 

3 

1% Barclay .04 11 

3 

2 

2 

2 + 

ft 

3ft 

2% BarcoCa .12 

7 

10 

3ft 

3 

3ft + 

ft 


14ft 

1 ClarkGr JO 18 

3 

14% 

Uft 

14ft.. 


TO* 

6% Clarkson .20 

6 

1 

8% 

8% 

8ft+ 

ft 

4% 

3% darortat 

6 

5 

3% 

3% 

3%- 

ft 

10% 

7 Clausing .64 

5 

4 

9ft 

9 

9ft... 


33% 

22ft Coach m . M 

7 

99 

31% 

31 

31 - 

% 

4% 

3% CoffMat .ISr 12 

9 

4 

4 

4 ... 

mm 

1ft 

15-16 Cohen Hotfd 

4 

1 

1% 

1ft 

1ft... 


19ft 

12% Coleman J2 

9 

56 

I6Y1 

U 

Uft- 

ft 

4ft 

2ft Golan Garni 


101 

3ft 

Sft 

3ft + 

% 

Aft 

3* CafwcttC JS 

5 

2 

9% 

9% 

5% + 

ft 

19% 

13 CombE .OSr 10 

20 

-17% 

17% 

17% ... 

... 


10% 5% Flimwy JSt 6 

I 5ft FinGen job 8 

2ft 15-16 Fst Hartfrd .. 
4ft 3ft FstHrt pf-50 .. 

8ft Sft FstSLSh .12 .. 


A Aft 6% Aft- ft! 

1 Tft 7% 7%- ft, 

1 1ft 1ft 1ft I 

2 4% 4ft 4%. % 

7 7ft 7ft 7ft I 


2% Tft Inflight Svc 5 6 1ft Tft 1ft- ft 


Tft ift Innlex Carp .. 27 2ft 2 


5% 3ft Instren JO .. 10 4ft 4)3 4ft- % ; 

2ft 13-16 Irtsirum Sys .. 31 1ft Tft Ift { 

24 8 I nsSy of J5» .. 1 11 11 11 1 


17 9% FlsehrP J8f A 20 15% 15% 15%- ft 

15% 13ft FHctibG Ml 6- 5 15% 15% 15% 


3% 1% integrt Res 

5 2% Intrmedoo 


■23 2 2 2 ...... 

53 1% 3% 4 + % 


19ft W% Media Gn .40 8 5 16ft Uft 16ft - ft 

17 7». Megotnt .30 5 98 U% WA 12%+ % 


16% lift MEMCb I 6 6 16% Uft 16%+ ft 

2ft ?• Mereant Ind .. 21 1 % 1 + ft 


* 2ft 1 Mafrocare 
1ft % Metro Grig .. 
3% 1% Mich Genl 3 

lift Uft MlchSugar 1 4 
3% 3 MidlS pf M .. 
11% 5ft MloklbrV -16 5 
. 8 3ft MIcBdCo .10 12 


4 1ft 1 1 

5 1% 1% 1% 

II 2% 2% 2%....'^l 

' I 11% 11% 11%- ft i 

1 3 3 3 

4 7 7 7 

3 Sft 5% 5% 


15% 10 MltBGIs .20) 6 18 15% 15 15 - ft 

20 W MQlerWa Ml 16 16ft 16 UU- ft 


23 1 ]?•'. MORoy JO* TO 
TA % Mteton )T .. 
31 36% Mitch! n 8 

A% TA NtfteCp .U 6 
22*6 fi 1 ! Matran wt .. 


4 18% 18% 1B%+ ft 

5 2 2 2 ....^ 

10' 2Bft 28ft 28ft- % 

2 5% Sft 5ft- ft 

7 17% 17ft 17ft- % 


50 44 Moop pM.40 .. xio 46% 4A% 46%+ % 
13ft 8% Mooa JO 7 1 10 10 10 


WV* 14% MtVMJl 1 JO 11 
2% 1 Movielab 7 
■ft 3ft MuttiAm .20 11 


6% 2ft Flagstaff 

8% 5ft Flavor land 


A 644- 4ft 4 


5 5% 5% 5ft- % 


12% Sft Inti Alum JO 7 44 Tift Tl lift- ft 

2ft 1% Inti Banknot 6 261 TU 2ft 2Vi 

23 Uft IntCour J4 12 12 16ft 15?'i Uft+ ft 


?. 3ft, Nanco .I2e a 

5% 3ft N«rttoM JO 5 

25 12>.< Net CSS w 

7ft 5ft NDlstr .u A 


2% ft fWlnd wt 


10% 9% nights ftv fdt 8 3 10 10 10 + ft lift o IntGenin JO 5 38 11% 11 11%+ % 


33% Comlnco 2 14 6 41% 41ft 41%...... 


13ft 9ft ComAII JOB 6 10 9ft 9ft 9%- ft 

7% 3% Gamdar BM .. 2 6 4 6 


1% 11-16 Fleck ind 
4ft 1ft Fla Capital A 
3ft 2% FlaRck -lOe 54 


3 T 1 1 

4 3ft Sft 3ft + ft 

8 3% 3% 3%+ ft 


3ft 1% Int Proteins .. 4 3ft 3ft Sft 


7ft 4% intseaw -I5e 3 4 Aft Aft tfft- ft 


12 6 Nat Peracn 5 

13 7% Nat Patent 62 


4% 1% Int stretch 


4% 2ft Nat Silver 13 


10% AH CoPSVCC JO 6 40 8ft Oft 8ft + ft 


77% 9% Flowers J4 8 XT5 17ft 17 17ft+ % 

16% 14% Fluke n 11 20 1 Aft 16ft 16%+ ft 


20 Uft ComPS M2 8 
4ft 2ft Gompac Cp .. 
2% Ift ComouDyn 7 


9 18ft 18ft 18ft- ft 
20 3% 3ft Sft- ft 
2 1ft 1% 1% 


20 13K FlvOia CHI 6 

9% 7ft FooteM J5e 13 


40 U 15ft 16 + ft 

2 *Vj Bft ty, 


36 . 25ft InfSyCOn JSW 3829 27% 29 + 1% i 

1ft ft interphgto 3 % ft % +1-16 \ 


Sft 2% Barnes Eng .. 
9 6% Bamwt .QSe 25 

10 5% Borrywr M 6 

4ft Tn Barth So .20 9 
V. IV. Baruch Fort 9 


2 3 3 3 - ft 

4 7ft 7% 7% 

2 7% 7% 7% 

6 2% 2ft 2ft + ft 

2 1% ift ift- ft 


3 1M6 Camout Inst .. It 1 1 1 ...... 

13% 6% Conehem .40 7 2 11% 1)% Il%- ft 


92% 72% FardCan 5a 5 z2« 89ft 88ft 89 + ft 
4% 2ft Forest Labs 8 2 3ft Sft 3% 


Tift 9% Interpool 9 5 13ft 13% 13%- ft 

lift 5 Interway Cp .. 13 9ft 9% 9ft. 


5 uft uft i3%- ft i w j;* JJg“ l ® K 

n> eft oft. i 2% 1ft NesfLM .He .. 


15% 9ft InvOMrs A 9 37 Uft 141b Uft- ft 
3ft 2% InvOlvers B 7 IS 3% 3*4 3%- ft 


Uft 2341 NENudr ^0 13 
1ft ft New Idria 0 


2 Behind .08A 8 17 4ft aft aft ♦ ft 


3% Benrus Cro 
2ft Berg Enf 


4»i ai/. - ft 


11 T'% 7% rv 


17ft 6ft Berg Bruns 12 17 9ft sft 9ft + % J 

27ft 13 BrgB pf 1.15 .. 25 16% U'4 16%+ ft 


4 1% BemzOma .. 1 2ft ift 2ft + ft 

5 4 Beriea .14 7 6 4ft aft aft 

6ft 3ft BervcnC ,0a .. rlO a a a 


1 2ft Tft 2ft + ft 


16% 

4% Concrd Fab 

2 

25 

6% 

6% 

6%... 


7% 

10% 

5% Candec Cm 

4 

3 

8* 

8% 

8% - 

ft 

10% 

4% 

3% Connllv Can 

A 

1 

3ft 

3ft 

3ft- 

ft 

23% 

,5ft 

2ft Conroy .OSe 

8 

3 

4% 

4% 

4ft + 

V. 

Sft 

13% 

6'J Con DJI Gas 

11 

US 

11% 

lift 

lift- 

ft 

10ft 

10% 

7ft ConsRef JO TO 

3 

Bft 

■ft 

Bft + 

ft 

17ft 

9ft 

3ft Consyne Cp 

14 

95 

9% 

9ft 

Oft... 


ff>l 

Ift 

% Cent Mater 


TO 

1% 

1% 

Ift... 


3ft 

Jft 

ft ContTei wt 


5 

1 

1 

1 +1-16 


11% 

5% Cook El .40 

16 

7 

lift 

Uft 

13ft... 

. ! 


20% 

14ft COdk Ind .40 

9 

12 

17ft 

17% 

17% + 

% ; 



1S% 8ft Fwc5taP JO 9 71 9% 9 
3% 1% Franklin Rl .. 3 3 3 


9 

3 


5ft 3ft Friedm .24b 6 


10ft 6?v Friotmp JSt 6 32 7<b 


Pt 3 BethCD -20e 31 6 3ft 3ft 3ft- ft 

2% Ift Beverly Ent 19 2* 2 ift ift 


Uft 9i,i BlcPen .36 10 

9% 5% Big Dad .30e 4 

16?v 11 BInkMt I 6 


« 13% 13 13 

* 7 4% 7 

4 15% 1 5ft 15ft- ft 


Sft 2ft Cooper Jar 6 
4% 2% Cordon Inti 11 
15% 9 Core Labs ID 

13ft 10ft Corenco .80 .. 


a 5ft Sft 5ft- ft 

I 2% 3% 2% 

6 Uft 14ft Uft- % 

1 13ft 13ft 13ft + ft 


Uft lift BlrmvSm .72 7 52 16V. 16 I6ft+ % j 3% 2 1-14 Courtld .We .. 


8% 7 Cornelius .ag 8 14 7% 7ft 7ft 

1 ft CottCorp wt .. 3ft ft' ft 


2 % GTI Corn .. 26 1% 1ft 1%* ft I 

Uft Sft Gabriel JO 6 1 9% 9% 9%- ft ' 

lift 7 Goran ,44a 6 3 10ft ICft 10ft- % ' 

3'. 2ft Garcia Corn 2 2ft 2‘b 2ft ■■ 

22 IFi Gearhri nJ8 10 22 21 20ft 20?i+ ft • 


4 

8 

7* 

7ft- 

ft 

U 

17% 

17% 

17% + 

ft 

2 

5% 

5% 

Sft... 


X 

Th 

7ft 

7ft + 

% 

75 

10ft 

9ft 

10% - 

ft 

2 

4ft 

Aft 

6ft- 

l. a 

5 

3% 

3% 

3ft + 

ft 

X 

4 

3% 

3ft- 

ft 

101 

1ft 

1ft 

1ft.. 

26 

Ift 

1% 

1ft* 

ft 

1 

9ft 

9ft 

9ft- 

ft 

3 

10ft 

TOft 

10*/.- 

ft 

2 

2ft 

2ft 

2ft... 



Sft 3 investRlt Tr 
9% 6% iroaBrd .16 .. 
0 61k IsraaiD .75e-.. 


11% t% Jacfvn JOb 4 A 8ft 8 Sft+ % 

10-y 7% Jacobs JOe 7 13 9% 9% 9%- ft 


; 3*i 2 Newark Rs 14 

A 8ft 8 Sft+ % ‘ U>i I2» NiaoFSv J4 5 


Sft aft jamswv .lit 4 


2 7 7 7 

4 12% 12 12%+ % 


5 2% Non Indus! 5 

12% a% Nofex CP 45 
5>I 2ft Nortek JM 8 


1 9% 9% 9ft 


15% 

9 ft Bowne 

J4 

7 

14% 

7% BradfdH 

JO 10 

Sft 

2% Branch 

.20 

4 

11% 

7ft BranilAr wf 


13 

10 BriXinA 

1 

3 

22 

IS Braun En 

.80 

5 


4 4ft 4ft 4ft 

3 10% 10% 10%+ ft 


19 13 CoxCbl Com li 

18% 17 Crompton is 

37 30 CrossAT | )2 

10ft 6ft CrawtM JO* 6 
35 15ft CwnCPt JOr 3 

4 4 Crownln .20 7 


2 2 1-16 21-16 21-16 

16 1 Uft lift Uft 

IS 11 14. 16 74 

12 I 32% 32% 32% 

6 S 8% 8% OH- ft 

3 3 19ft 19ft 19ft- ft 

7 I -5ft 5ft 5ft 


4ft 

Ift G Housewar 

6 

9 

3 

3 

3 - 

ft i 

•2’'. 

1ft Gen Recrat 


1 

1% 

1ft 

ift... 


4'U 

ift Gen Resrch 

4 

2 

2% 

2% 

2ft... 

| 

2 

ift Genlsco Teh 

6 

I 

1% 

1% 

Ift... 

' 

4ft 

1* Geon lnd 


20 

Ift 

1* 

1ft... 

' 

4% 

2ft Gerber 5d 


13 

4% 

4% 


ft | 

17% 

14% GiantFd la 

5 

12 

16% 

16 

Uft + 



5ft 

2 Jefronic Ind 

4 

3 

Sft 

Sft 

3ft... 


20% 

10ft John Pd JO 

9 

» 

12ft 

lift 

lift- 

ft 

4'« 

2% Juniper Pel 

9 

48 

Ph 

2% 

2ft... 

... 

8% 

3% KTellR -30e 

5 

1 

Aft 

Aft 

6ft + 

• f 4* 

15% 

B KKAISRIndJA 9 

3U 

15% 

1S% 

15T..+ 

v» 

■ft 

5ft KoneMiil wt 


4 

Aft 

6ft 

6ft- 

ft 

7% 

4% r.apokT jot 

8 

1 

4ft 

4ft 

4=1- 

=5. 

Aft 

ift KenwinS J4 

6 

8 

6ft 

6% 

6ft + 

ft 

VA 

4V. Keldim .10r 

5 

4 

5ft 

Sft 

5%- 

ft 


5ft 2% Nbvo Corn 


J1 13ft Offshore Co 4 
6% 4ft OhtoArt J4 12 
3V1 28% Ohiofl 140a 3 
10% 4% Of la Ind JOe 6 


A : 28% I2?% Kewanee JO 7 51 23 22ft 23 - ft < JTi r* OSullvn JOb 6 


6 4 crownm .20 7 1 -3/1 5*A» 5ft , ^ 2* 2 1 10% 4% memens .. 1 8ft aft 8ft- ft 

9ft 5’a.CrutcR .36 12 36 9% 8ft 9ft- Ui I ^ •; ** * **+ Jk - +4% Wb KtockT 22 I 21 22ft 22ft ZZft+ ft 

Oft 7% CrvsflO .40e .. 229 12 toft 11% + 1ft j ^ Jj \ *2? ^ * *•% 18ft Koilmor JO II 10 26'4 26 26’i- 'i 

| S'-. 3% GlenGer .16 37 3 4% 4% 4% ** Kvh nStr .10 5 14 Tv. 7ft 7%- «. 


4 % KWde wf .. 10 Sft 3% 3’ si 

2 Ift KinArk Cm I 29 1ft 1ft lft+ ft 

4 1ft King Optid .. 1 2 2 2 - ft 

Bft 4»,* XinostiD JB4 7 i 5% 6 + ft 

41% 16 Klrbvw 25c 4 4 16ft Uft 16ft+ ft 

6'i l*> KleerVu Ind .. 5 a% 4ft 4>k- ft 

10% 4% Klrtnerts 1 8ft aft 8ft- ft 

24% 10ft KmckT 22 I 21 22ft 22ft 2Zft+ ft 


6% l'v KleerVu ind .. 


7-U 'b FNBMR wt 


Results of Trading in Stock Options 


American Stock Exchange 


FRIDAY. AUGUST 6, 1974 


Chicago Board 


* 1 Uft 14% PGE pf 1.37 .. 

i : Uft 12ft PGRd pfIJS .. 

« i 15 13 PGpfA 1.25 .. 

SS 27*1. 24ft P I0.18pf2.S4 .. 

29'.J 26ft P 10.44pf2J2 .. 

13n» 17% PG 4Jon.!2 .. 

24 21ft PG BArf2.0S .. 

23ft 20»v PGEScI 2 -. 

24 21% PG 8.100.04 .. 

- 13ft lift PG 4 Jofl. 09 .. 

it 4*i.PHotdg .14 .. 


17 14ft PNwTet 7.20 a 


- Aug - - Nov - - Feb - N.Y. 


Option & price vSTlast Voi. - Losl voL Last Ctose j Option & price" vm! Lost" vm? Last vol" L ast cine 


- Am - - Nov - - Feb - n.y. - Oci - - Jon - - Apr - n.y. 

Option » price Vpi. Last Vcf. Last VW. Last Cta» Option 9, price Voi. Lest . Vof. Last vol. Last Ciose 


7ft 4 Pandl BradT 4 
5 3 Panfast JO 8 


Option 8! Price Vol. Usf Vol. Last VW. Last Close Motria ..JO 
AMF ..20 75 5-16 727 !ft 531-71-76 20% Pflier ...30 

AMF ..25 1 1-16 60 % 75 9-16 20% Pfizer ....25 

ASA ...30 4 1-16 56 3-16 b b 17ft Ph Mgr .60 

A 5.A ... 35 a « 30 ft b b 17ft Ph Mgr . 50 

ASA .. 20 254 ft 251 ft 261 Ift 17Vk PhetoS ...40 

ASA ..25 31 1-16 33 % 153 11-76 17ft Phelps ...45 

AS A 15 b b 111 3ft 101 3ft 17ft ProcG ..90 

Avnel ....75 34 5 6 5fta «20ftProcG '.J0 


: 19 : 5ft 3 7% 1 9 54ft 


A S A ... 35 
ASA ,.20 


ASA ..25 
ASA 15 


Avnel ....75 
Avnel ...20 


75 J 9-U 

29 

1* 

22 

1* 

27% . 

4 

Jft 

a 

a ' 

a 

a 

27% 

5 

5-U 

15 1 1-U 

' 4 21-16 

S2Vs 

15 

4% 

4 

5ft 

15 

6* 

52ft 

213 

1ft 

40 

3 

4 

a 

40% 

Ml 

7-U 

16 

1 

4 

a 

40% 

X 

5% 

b 

b 

b 

b 

.99% 


option & price Vol. Lost VW. Last VW. Last Close ! 
A E P 19% 21 2ft b b b b 22ft 1 


3% Patagonia 


Cat 0 ..46ft 
Cat O . -53ft 


125 ft 101 1% 63 2 7-U 20ft ProcG '..90 


CatO ...60 


3 14% b b b b b ProcG too 

17 7ft l 1% b b b Rite A ...15 

51 1ft 10 3H 4 4ft b- Rite A ..JO 

9 1% 7 2 7-16 40% StCal ...30 

a 4 6 4 18ft St .Cal .. 35 


Con Ed ..75 
Con Ed .J0 
Or Pep ..15 
Dr Peg ,J0 
El Pas ..10 
El Pas .. 15 
Fleet* ..is 
Fleetw ..30 
Grace ...30 
Grace ...25 
La Pac ..10 
La Pec -U% 
La Pac ..15 
La Pac 19ft 
N DfeF ...30 
N Dist ..15 


75 } Tandy .. 30 

15 Tandy .. 35 


NortS ..JO 
Nort S ..25 
Penney ..40 
Penney ..45 
Penney ,J0 
Phil p ..40 


a a 22 5-14 131 ft 18ft St Cal ..40 

85 1ft 12 2% 1 2% Uft TRW ..35 

2 1-76 35 ft 41 ft Uft TRW ..40 

a a 1 S 10 4ft 15 Tandy .. 30 

98 3-16 211 ft 12 1 15 Tandy .. 35 

55 1ft 57 2ft 7 3 Uft Tandy .. 40 

17 1-16 44 9-16 27 l Uft Tandy ...45 

40 VU 63 ft 47 1 27 Tandy ...50 

25 3ft 11 2 13-14 17 3ft 27 Texaco .JO 

b b 10 4% 1 4ft Uft Texaco .15 

83 1-14 111-14 15 1 3-16 13ft U Carb .. 80 

b b 20 11-16 21 1 13ft U Carb .M 

4 4 6 ft 2 ft 13% U Carb ..70 

4 a 5 ft 2 % 26ft. U SSt ..JO 

W6 1 7.16 42 2 18211-16 26ft U 5 StO 53ft 

45 ft 29 1ft a ■S 20ft U 5 St ..J5 * 

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b b 5 7ft a a 93% 

48 ’Ift 19 7% 2 3ft 93% 

2} 2ft 23 3% a a . 77 

82 ft 45 I 415-16 17- 

1? * • a b b -38% 

77 3ft 16 3ft 3 4 38ft 


A E P ...20 
A E P ...25 
AMP ..JO 
AMP ..35 
Am Has .an 
Am Has .35 
Am HOB .40 
Baxter .. 35 
Baxter ..m 


b b 22ft iClHCb. ...40 
9 2 77-16 22ft DdU — ® 


b 10 2ft 9 211-16 22ft — S 

b 17 ft 51 5-16 22ft HiVh— if 
4 a 4 - a ' a 33V> DOW Cn .45 

17 ft 73 1ft ' a a 33ft 1 

5 4ft 9 5 4 4 34ft OowC? ■£ 

ft 3 1% 4 4 34ft |*S Kd . .90 


13 3-U 14 ft 32 IVb 34ft 

I 4 a a 25 6 42% 

27J 7-14 33 2ft 45 3ft 42% 

4H 2*4 53 3% 35 <ft 44ft 

598 ft 64 1ft 32 2% 44ft 

129 ft 29 9-16 b b 44ft 

453 8% 103 lift 34 12ft 94% 


ft a a 34ft Eas Kd .HQ 1037 11-16 221 2ft 56 PA 94% 


2ft 1ft PennDbc wt .. 72 2 

9% 6ft PenEnM .60 8 4 8' 

7 3% PECS .68! 7 60 5 1 

12ft 9% PenRIE 1.15 7 9 12 

Stt 2ft PenobS .ISe 4 6 4 

1% ft Pentron Ind 6 30 V 


n EM Kd -J20 


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abb 
k 3 4 


Baxter ..as 
Baxter .. a 


52 I-U 63 Ift 7 2 5-16 42 I”™" 


a Eas Kd -1C® 1448 3ft 218 6Vk 109 8% 94% 


Bk Dk , JO 
Blk Ok . JS 


22 ft 491 1-16 40 1ft 38% 


22 2ft 7 3ft 
8 11-16 8 1% 


Borina ..JO 
Boeing .. 35 
Boeing ..40 


4 38 Sft 42 6% 32ft 


Boring ..AS 
Boring ..JS 


a a 14 ft b b 

7 -1ft 162 7-16 28 3 

'7 1-16 52 9-16 22 T 

9 12ft 19 12ft b b 

in 7 39 7% 14 8% 

165 -2ft 77 3ft 19 5 

b b 65 1% 302 15-16 


16 42 Exxon .. 45 93 Oft 27 9% b b 54ft 

b 42 Exxon .. 50. 476 4ft 104 ' 4% 38 5ft 54ft 

3 j,y£ Exxon .. 55 271 13-16 W21-16 34 2% 54ft 

_ run 1C WT ll. MB 1*1 1£ lli> 1117. 


1 aift I E 5 M 


F N M ...20 


73 % 

51 15-16 

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Bofs C ..,38 

Bois C » 


BoisC ...25 
CBS ..60 


5 ' 17 r 16% b 

3 7-U 21 ft 17 

2 6 b b b 


47 Fluor ... 38 
42 Fluor ....35 

« Fluor ....40 

b 42 Fluor 45 

) go ft Ford .... 68 

b Ford ....JS- 


727 ft 169 13-16 308 Ift 74% 
26 1-16 a a a a 14% 

2 125k 4 13ft b b 42ft 

3 8% a. 4 b b 42ft 


II 4ft 21 * 6% 5 7U 42ft 


2713-16 IS 2% 13 3ft 24V. Ford ....50 

22 ft 62ft 24ft59ft , GM -■■■■» 

5 - V16 37 7-16 b b 23ft ® “ $S 

a 9b b b ' b 23ft G M 7» 


C Data „3S 5 1-14 37 7-U b b 23ft “ 

C Data ..15 46 9 b b b b 23ft G M to 

C Data ..20 218 4ft 55 4ft 2 Sft 23ft Gen E . ..a 

C Data ..25 .544 % 149 1 9-16 107 2% 23ft Gen El ,M 

CmwEd 30 18 % .41 % 611-16 29% GfJlEl ..SO 

Coke .... Jii 115 Oft 15 8ft a a 86% SE JJM - ' s 


100 1% 33 _ Jft a « 42ft 
127 1% 61211-16 17 Sft 54% 

1 71ft b b b b 36% 

28 7ft 7 Oft 4 9% 56% 

2 5-U 25 I b b 69ft 

117 9ft 6 10ft 2 11% 69ft 

349 2% 82 4 99 5 49ft 


8% 3ft Pei lec Corp 5 
13% 6% Retro Lewis .. 
8ft Sft PhlILD J4r 4- 
4ft 3 Phoenix Stt .. 
lift Th PicNPey JO 7 
2ft 1H4 Pioneer sys .. 
8ft 6 PionTex .80 4 
6% 5ft PlfWVa J6a 9 


lift 79k Plant Ind 


20 3ft K%ft ftft 15 6ft 


Cmw Ed 30 
CAe ....JO 
Colee ....90 


a 25 5-U b 

a 1 7-14 11 

m b b b 


1 48% Wertng .. 10 
b 48% I Wertng ..15 


PWI P » 
phn p ..to 
S earte .. 15 
5ea lie .. 20 
Jimp P ..Iff 
Simp P ..15 
Sima p .JO 
Simp P . J5 
Starts ... 15 
Sterlg ...JB 
Tennco .JO 
Tarmco ...25 
Tennco ..35 
Tiger ... 15 
Tiger ... 20 
Zenith .. 30 
Zenith .. 35 
Zenith M . 40 
Zenith ... 25 


44 7-U 24 2ft 47 41k 48% Westng . JO 

47 ft 18211-U 2 4% 59% Wm Lm 30 

j m is 10% « a 59% wmuri .35 


4 JO 5-16 H 1 1-16 59% I Total volume 18.633 


42 1% 5 3% b b 52 

30 1 16 2% 2 3% b 

T % 11 15-14 b b 52 

» 6ft b b b b 14% 

W 3ft 35 211-16 82 3ft 16% 
M 3-16 104 9-16 61 ft 16ft 

l 4% a a a a 34% 

U )ft I 2ft I 3% 34ft 


897 1-16 328 9-16 Ju 15-16 13% - . a-Not traded. b-No Option offered. 

jf ’f JJ JS 1 ■ 58,13 ,0te * as * i* premium (purchase price). 

Id w 2 ■•'Ml 4 4 t1 i4Vi 

175 ft 107 ft 46 1% 14% 

2 1-16 40 3-U 2 ft 14ft 

a a 2 7-U b b 14ft — — ’ 1 - ■ * " ■■■ ■ — 


Open Interest 825,984 


Coigat .. 30 
Cotgal .. 25 
Gen Fd ..3D 

Gear. Fd .Js 

Gen Fd ..25 

Gn Ovn .«a 

Gn ovn .<40 

Gn Dvn .AS 

Gn Oyn .Jo 

Gn Dvn ..70 • 

H Inns ...10 


115 Ck 15 8% 1 a «6% SHJ5E 

249- ft 54 2% 4 4% 86% GKWn .JO 

199 ft 87 % 98 1 5-16 GJWP 0 . U 

127 3ft 2* Sft 6 ift 28% GfWn 0 . 20 

292 2% 176 3 32 3ft 32ft » «£ ..IS 

b b 148 ft 76 V 32ft S*™? 

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26ft 19% PrenHa 1.12112 
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11-16 Tech Svm 
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1% Techd Tap* 
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8ft Teteflex J2t 
2ft Tenna.Corp 
4% Tenneco wt 
10ft Teradvn inc 
9 TerraC .60a 
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6ft ThriTftmt A 
6ft TTffonvV JB 
3 TImote Ind 

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■ oft .TofalPtf NA 
1 5-U TotaiPft wt 

I 10% Total pf .70 

■ 1% Trans Lux - 
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UU IJOa 4 . 1 17* 
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URSCo .TOe 10 6 3% 

uvtnd «*!'.. « 5 
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UnAirPd J6 I .19 
Un Asbestos 15 53 UK 

UnBrand wt W A 
uwf Foods .. 1 IK 

Uirtfct Corp t. .7 15 -h: 
UPlace Dv U. 5 
USFiltr J4 7 32- 9% 

UnRttT. .Ue II 39 6% 
UnRItT wf .. 45 - ft. 

USNat Rsrc 5 6 3%. 

US Radtom 25 3 2 . 

UnlvRs .«e 11 13 1% 


.*-c- 

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2ft Ift 
9*4 5% 

13ft 4% 
11% 6ft 
5 1% 

7ft 2ft 
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11% 6% 
16% IT 


Valmac .TO 2 3 m 

VLDvC rtttte .. 11 2+ 
VanOsrn- JO 4 5 8 

Vara Inc * 6 265 m 
Veecolns J2 13 7 IN 

Verlt ind 9' 7 2% 

Vernltran W 29 B 
Vertioil Inc 21 5 IT 

Viking Gam .; 3 1 

Vikoa Inc 15 6 3* 

VI shay Intrt * l 3* 
VIsualGr I 7 V 
Vutelnc J4 4 Iff 

vufdncpf 1 .. t U 


6 2% WTC Inc .10 HO 

21% 15ft wuilnc .80 7 
Oft 3ft Wabash .10a 6 
9% 4'4 Wacknht ^0 * 
4% 1% wadetEa .» .. 
15 1% WaunrEI .41 12 

20 10'A WanoLb .10 16 

7% 3 WarC gfC05 .. 
41ft 21% WasPsIB JO 10 
19% 14% WRIT 1.56 11 
4 2% Watsco 1-JO 13 

■ft 5ft weldTu Am 4 
lift 7% WeslChP-xtO 8 
- 17ft 9% westats Ptt 14 
Oft 6ft WstFInl .15a 3 
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9% 6ft Whiggnv M 7 
3*4 ,lft wwtahal Co 4 
1ft '% Whfttakr wf .. 

3 . 1ft Wichita Ind 6 

2 1ft Wilex G ' .. 
4ft 2*6 Winston Ml I 4 
54 41 WIsP pi 4 JO .. 

lift 5ft WDrcert Ctl 12 
11% 6ft Wgrkwr -rtO 7 
4ft 3% Wrather Cp 9 
1*« % WriWit Her io 


Si 




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12 4% Zimmer .06e 12 7 8 


90 1% 91 4% ? AV. 60% Hajbta 


■4 a I 22% b b «im Haiwn 56% 

4 76 a a b b 60% - Hatotn ...60 

a a 1 12% i 73 40% H atotn ...to 

b b 36 1% 34 2% 40% -S 


148 15-16 771 11-16 b b b 
2 3 24 3ft TO 4 17% 

47 7-U 91 1>16 22 1ft 17% 

2 ID b b b b 40tt 

h. b 3 Oft b b 42% 

a 7ft b b b b 42ft 


3 5ft 5ft 5ft- ft 

I 23 23 23 

1 2ft m 2ft + ft 


H Inns ..15 
H Inns .. jo 


a 14 3ft 8 4ft ™ Homstk .JS 

I-U 158 % 83 1ft Homs* 


Hevdet .no 
Hewte! ...to 


b !j% f Hornrtk ._jC 


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a a 42 S-U * ft 17ft 

104 3% 721 .4 94 4% 34ft 

21 8ft a * a a 34ft 

b b 194 7 4917-16 34ft 

101 1 52 Ift 17 2% 15% 


Hewiet .128 
Hewte! ..wo 


Philadelphia Options 


Honwtl ..-jo 

HOnwfl ..AO 


- Aug - - Nov - - Feb - n.y. 


2» 3ft 1 4% TO * OTk ° Pttal - » ^ W - U* -V«- Lit VW. Law doJe 
105 5-16 471 1H6 11 2% 33% H — ~~ 


HonwH .. J5 

Honwil ,.ae 
Hanwrll , ; 45 
Honwil ..So 
In Fiv ...30 


in Fiv .. 20 
In Fiv .. J5 


Aetna ...35 
Aetna ...30 
Aetna ...25 
Am Cya 30 
Am Cva .30 
Am Cva 25 
Am Horn 30 
Am Horn 35 
Am Horn 40 
A5arco ...If 
A54T00 .. 20 

■Belt F ..25 
Beat F ..30 
Surroh - 110 
Burrgh ,.90 
Bumoh .NO 
C Tel ... 10 

....15 

...» 

- ... JS 
...40 
...70 


■ 

66 

Mi 

b 

b 

8% 

b 

b 

b 

b 

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Jan - ~ - Apr - 

7-16 

75 

15-16 

36 

1% 

2% 

60 

3ft 

37 

4ft 

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10 

Aft 

a 

2 

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22 

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7 

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a 

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A Hess 19% 


7%. 4 4 b b 22ft 

13 2ft 1 3% a a 22ft 

27 2 7 3 2 3ft 22ft 

14 3.16 a a a a 22ft 

2 M6 11 % 117-16 22ft 

a A 5 7ft a a 46% 

» 1% 5 2% a 4 46% 

TO ft « a 3 2 44ft 

• * 2 ft IS 1 26ft 

4 Ift a 4 4 a 24ft 

• ■ * ■ 5 4*A 22ft 

2 1-16 2 9-16 2 15-16 22% 

131 3-U 8113-74 112 I-U 28% 
N 3% 53 4% 2 ift 28% 

a a 37 15-16 25 1% 14% 

a a - 2 3-16 a a Uft 

2 3% a a 4 6% 47ft 

5 % a • a 3 4 47ft 

7 Ift a a b b 42ft 


27 2 7 3 

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20 1% 5 2% 


1 ft 1 33% 

2 3% 17% 


Flrsfn ...JB 


ij a ■ 1 an l/vi Blntn K 

79 5-74 4 13-16 9 1 3-16 17ft plrsm . ~ 35 

192 1-14 1 2211-14 5 3ft 27 La Lnd . JIT 
31 ft 2 % a i • 27 La Lnd ..25 

44 % 32 <2% 40 4 95% „ 

86 *% 15 11% a a 95ft ■“S 

285 3ft 20 5% « a 95ft 

^ Me Dar I JO 

« 1 48 1% 15 2ft 29ft Pttfln ... JS 

1 4% a a b b 29ft Pttrtn ...40 


a 

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104 

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36 

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b 

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J Manv .» 

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J Manv . J5 
J Walt ..» 

J watt .. js 
j wan 

Atobil . 55 

Mobil ...AO 


Semi 

Semi .jo 


N Send . J5 7to 1% 478 3* 158 Sft 35% 

N semi .M 512 3-16 583I13-H3S2 3ft 3S% 

N Send .45 29 1-14 265 A2921 15-16 3S% 

N Semi .JO 33 1-16 142 7-16 252 15-16 35% 

Ocd IS 2X1 3% TO 4ft 131 4% 18% > —7-^ - a 

Ocd .... JD 1D05 ft 577 1 244 1% 71% I M M M .40 

Raythn .AD . 258 2% 222 5% 9 . 7% 67% M M M .70 


354 7-U 42 4% A Th 1(M% | B M - J® 

33 Uft b b b b 104% B M ..JOT 

25 1-U 71 1H 4 W 104% B M ..» 

131 5 26 10 a a ^ B M .2X 

2 16* b b b b 46% N A ...40 

a * Ui 7-U b b 46% J?* — S 

• 5 11% b b b b 46% JTT ...JO 

73 6% 7 Bft 30 9ft 46ft I I ■■■ to 

351 2ft 189 4% 37 4ft 46% T U T --S 

633 ft 35525-16 38 3% 46% " ^ 

a 1 a 56 % b b 25ft J" ^ 

34 5% a a 1 6 25% ! n 

147 13-16 66115-16 20 - 2% 25ft "K" 

22 5-14 121 1ft Z» 2% 29ft Jn Pap ...» 

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US P/a a a 2 Sft 29% 

30 2 * 3ft 73 Ph 32 

a 4 50 1 27 1 1 5-U 32 

1 1-16 11 5-16 6 ll-U 32 

» 2% _ 34 4% 8 5% 57 

107 1-U 621 7-U 27 2ft 57 

3 12>4i b b b b 57. 

50 7ft 54 1% b b 57 

a • io 1-U b b 35% 

b b 53 7ft 16 8% 35% 


44 

4% 

26 

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25 

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19 

2ft 


3 

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4io 

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107 

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76 13-U 

40 

VI6 

b 

b 

80 

39% 

a 

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20% 6 Presley Cos 32 394 12% lift 12%+ 1 

10% 8ft PrpCT 1.18* 8 8 9% 9% 9% 

2% 1ft PrdRlE .15e ..6 2 1% 2 

5 3ft PrudBdg J4 4 6 3% 3ft 3% 

54 45% PSCol C34J5 .. Z15B 49 48% 48%- % 

51k 2ft Purte Hmes 10 . 17 5ft 5ft Sft+ ft 
5 2% PixitoGrd Is I 8 Sft SVk 3ft.'..... 


948 

8% 

III 

15% 

92 

20% 

774% 

682 

22% 

a 

28% 

X 

33% 

274ft 

n 

3 

7 

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5 

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42ft 

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3 

1% 

3 

1% 

42% 

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124 

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86 

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31 

1 

10ft 

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b 

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136 

6 

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4V 1 

1 /-IA 

71 2 5-16 

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Q— R— S— T 
S 5 A 3| ,nd * 13 s 

2% 1% RSDM CO 5 2d I 

1*9 ii*5Sj»KFd - 24 1 

3 1% RPs Prod 9 2 1 ; 

,2ft 1ft WC indKt 9 5 V 

10% 5 RLC Cora 6 7 V 


SEU 


13 5*A 5% Sft 

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24 1ft 1ft Ift 

2 1* 1* 1* | 

5 1% 1% lft+ ft I 

7 9% 9% 9*- ft i 


through 
wantads ' 




™ ? 8 *Si -I 5 * ± 90 7% 7% 7%+ % 

22% 13% Ranchn Ex 22 8 17ft 16% 77' - ft 


’JS ’?* SSH? C T 52 N 15% 15ft 15ft- % 
Ift 1 RandAm wl .. 4 i i | _ ft 


1631 1-16 31 1 15-16 115 2% 33ft 

75 ft 107 % 85 ft 33ft 

a a 41 1% b b 48 . 


31 8 a ■ a a 

95 Th 13 3% 3 4% 


4% 2ft Rath Pack .. 
23 13% Ravin Pr AG 28 

•*A 5% RHIncT ,40e .. 
17% 12% R If Ref lOle 9 
3% 2ft Redtaw Enf 34 


39 3ft 3ft 3ft+ ft 

3 21% 21% 21ft- % 

2 Oft 8% 8ft + ft 

7 17ft 17ft 17% 

1 2% 1% 3ft+ ft 


* a 1 9% a a 86ft 

40 1ft a a a a 84* 

4 a 4 ft fa b 86ft 

11 Ph 32 5ft 31 4 3Jft 

167 1ft 61 2ft 13 3ft 33ft 

375 % 99 2ft 5 3% 72% 

51 13% a 4 b b 72% 

186 4* 87 7 3 8% 72% 

35 4% b b b b 36ft 

3529-16 1 3% 1 4% 36% 

58 % 16 1% 9 23-16 36% 

84 7-U 4 1% 21 1ft 27 

4 7% -b b b b 27 


JS 5** w ! a L Te,c “ 1° l*k 1ft lft+ ft 
*5 E e S? 1 B Aa 9 1 8ft 8ft 8ft+ ft 




Ift ft RelGra wt 


91 1% 1% 1ft- 


JS? !i£ 5* mAr 7 20 13% lx* 13ft- % 

SS IfS 5S*!JL 3 A 1 ?3V* 23 'A nv2- % 


MS KS!? 1 2 ™ U* UFA... " 


24% 14 Rertstflx .50 6 I 17 17 17 - "ft 


through 
want ads 


? Rtorislntt A 6 43 A 3% 4 ...... 

TV 1 Rest Assoc .. 2 1ft 1h IK. u 

2/ Kjjrt Prod 20 . 6 4% 4ft 4% + % 


a a 14% 

4 5% 47% 

3 4 47% 

b b 42% 


Raythn ..45 
Rayton ..50 


Raythn .. 70 
Rynkto 


II 12% 2 13ft* a 


b 62% M MM .JO 


Dig Eg 

160 

117 

15% 

77 

20% 

X 

Dig Eg 

lto 

177 

9% 

41 

14ft 


Dig Eg 

ISO 

37 

27% 

11 

27% 

h 

Dig Eg 

no 

247 

4% 

53 

Uft 

751 

Ohnw 

..60 

227 

ft 

115115-16 

X 

Disney 

,.5D 

203 

3ft 

V 

m 

59 

Du pm 

IW 

X 

ft 

46 

1% 


DU Pnt 

140 

12 

4% 

95 

tu 


duPnt 

..140 

b 

b 

b 

b 

6 

DU Pnt 

. >» 

1351 7-U 

53 

4ft 

b 

duPnt 

...IX 

b 

b 

56 

13% 

b 

mu Pnt 

..IX 

b 

b 

b 

b 

1 

DU Pnt 

.IX 

2 

9ft 

b 

b 

b 

Fst Ch 

..U 

S 

% 

61 7-U 

22 

FrfCh 

..JB' 

a 

a 

5 

5-U 

X 

GTti 

...a 

281 

% 

S 11-16 

n 


Sun Co ..JS 


b -164% Trnsam .10 
A 146% TimWfll ..15 

wiwrili .JO 


2 23i wivwiti .jo 

b wt ^ m 

^ Alld C ...35 

S AIM C .. 40 

h A<ldC AS 

AJIHC ...25 

k Branlf .. IB 

i% BrsIT ' •• “ 

'i? JS Oorox to 
« ^ Ctorox. ...is 


• 

2ft 

• 9 

. 4ft 

4 

A 

42% 

SfcYlin 

....25 

54 

3-16 

24 T ll-U 

3 

3 

47ft 

5lgmj> 

...X 

b 

b 

12 

% 

a 

a 

42% 

Slump 

Slunto 

...60 

...90 

a 

a 

a 

a 

1 

5ft 

37ft 

Souftm 

...15 

a 

4 

. a 

- a 

1 

2ft 

37* 

SI Ind 

.. 45 

24 

3ft 

40 

2ft 

15 

3ft 

12% 

St lad 
Tx GJf 

.. 50 
.. X 

a. 

8 

47 

5-U 

32 

9-W 

12% 

Tx-Gif 

-JS 

2 

Sft 

1 

3ft 

20 

4 

22% 

Tx on 

-XI 

35 

HA- 

12 

ft 

21 

1ft 

22ft 

UAL 

f 1 to 1 

,. X 

Oct 


Jan 


Apr 

- 


UAL. 

UAL 

.. s 

.. 25 

1 

5ft 

« 

' • 

* 

t 

40ft . 

U Tech 

-.JO 


■b 

b 

91 

1ft 

2 

2% 

22 

ft 

9 1 17-16 

17 

3 

26 

27a 

20 

3% 

4 

4 

46 

% 

63 

ft 

90 

1% 

a 

a 

3* 

ft 

b 

b 

64 

10% 

4 

lift 

a 

a 

2 

30% 

b 

b 

b 

b 

b 

b 

62 

4% 

87 

6ft 

32 

ft 

in 

7-16 

31 

ft 

41 

A 

» 

6 

4 

7V. 

37 

1ft 

40 

2ft 

2 

3% 

6 

Sft 

a 

-a 

b 

b 

24 7M6 

35 

2 

19 

2ft 

a 

a 

40 

ft 

s 

Ift 

280 

ft 

172 1 1-U 

b 

b 

2 

7Vi 

S 

7ft 

b 

to 

248 

2 

67 

3% 

b 

b 


.. 80 
.. 76 
..80 
'..90 
Maroon .MO 
NCR ..30 


04 7-U 4 ift 21 1% 27 

4 7% .b b b b 27 

11 2 ll-U 3 3% 5 ' 4 27 

43 2% 5 4% 3 5% 59% 

V. H M 2 1% 59% 

M Uft 2 lift fa b 59% 

«? 1ft 68 2* 77 4ft 55 

37 ft— 49 % b <b 55 

» 4% 16 • 2 9% 55 

28 % 1 2ft a a 71ft 


7% 3% Rldrton .He 3 
II 10V> Riley Co 9 
37% 21ft RlcAlom 1 17 
2Jft 6ft RIsdwiM J6 II 
29% 17% RoUnfedi 
ift 2% Roblln ind 3 


5 5 4% ift- % 

8 15% Uft 16%+ ft 

1 36% 36% 36%+ % 


tsft a% Room Cora - 
3% 1% Ronco Tetep 4 


4% 27 6% 3 7ft 71% 


Pensiz ...35 


25 2 12 2% 

ia %• 5- i 


G Td ... J5 
Gillet ... 30 


125 3ft 56 3ft 
5 2 13-14 a a 


a ift gomsat '"jo 
J 52 Comsat- .js 


10 %' 5- I b b 40% 

2 1% 4- 2ft 2 3% 35% 
5 2ft 29 3 13 3ft 13% 

49 % IS -ft 51 1 12% 

.* a 1 3 3 3% 12% 

44 % 44 Mt * ft 12% 

*. Jk I * » VA 24% 

ava 7 n 


Gilfef 

... JS 

2 

7-16 

32 

Ift 

5 

1% 

31% 

Goodyr 

.JO 

11 2 11-16 

V 

3% 

5 

324 

22ft 

Goodyr 

..35 

46 

5-16 

34 

* 

» 15-H 

22% 

Greyhd 

..15 

IX 

% 

24 15-14 

37 

1ft 

Uft 

GrevM 

.JO 

SO 

1-16 

7S 

3-16 

W 

5-U 

14% 

Gulf 0 

..23 

82 

2ft 

-5 2 13-U 

4 

3ft 

26% 

Guff O 

-X 

25 

3-16 

37 

MS 

5 

% 

26% 

H F C 

.. 15 

10 

3% 

a 

a 

3 

ift 

11% 


2* MS 9 3% a 3% 35ft 


a 40% UTedi ..JS 

b 40% UTKh 

% 25% U Tech . M 

a 13% ywj 

i 12% ysj • — g 

a im uian m .i.M 

£ S* Utah ,...J0 

? JS 1 - WIW»» ..JO 

. ^ Wnims ..20 

4 24% I wnims ..25 


37 9-U 55 2ft 22 3*4 34ft — ™ 


N 8ft 9 TO 2 12% a&%- 

1732 13-16 22 5 21 6ft 86% 

194 7-U M 1 11-16 b b 86ft 

J 4% a a a a 33% 

2 f% 1 9ft b b 33% 

46 1% 24 211-16 4 3ft 33ft 

33 4ft 4 5% * a 31% 

6 8% 2 9ft b b 33% 

47 Ift 22 2ft 3 3% 33% 

•1 2% 39 3% 3 4% 31% 

47 9-1* 53 . 1% U 2ft 31% 

26 11% b b b b 31% 

7 4ft 4 7 b b 31% 

16 4% | 6ft a a 11% 

3 U% a a a a lift 

1 5 J W b b 29 


10 7% Russell Co 40 4 

TO 5ft RustCft ,40 6 


16% 

U 

16% + 

% 

25 

21% 

34ft- 

ft 

3% 

3% 

3%.. 


3ft 

.3% 

3W- 

% 

12 

12 

12 .. 


2 

2 

2 ... 


3% 

3ft 

3ft- 

"ft 

1* 

1% 

1ft- 

% 

7% 

7% 

7% - 

% 

a 

7* 

7ft- 

ft 

18 

18 

18 - 

ft 







'•x- 


7% Sft SGLln .12r 6 1 4ft 6ft 6ft 

2ft ift SGSec Jle .. 4 1ft ift lft+ ft 


7% 5TPCO 45* 9. 41 9% 9% 9%+ % 


3ft SiflronSy A 5 


15% M Salem J9t 4 7 10ft 10 10ft- ft 

19% 14* Sambas 32 ID 174 15% 15ft 15% 

9% 8% SDteG of Jg .. 1 10 10 10 + % 


10% 9ft SCHeG Of .90 .. 3 10 10 10 

28% 26 SDgo pf 2J8 .. - M 27 26% 27 


a 7 1! b b 34ft ... » S? SS .2! Wft H b 39 

b 2 ft 8 7ft 34% Pdjar ...J5 *58 5ft IW 7% 36 a* 39 

ft 33 3ft 14% 57% E°j! lr , »”42 I1» 2% 253 4 144 5% 39 

“ RCA. -..JO 3A ft. 159 1% 40 2ft 27% 


3ft 1% Sargent lnd 7 39 2ft 2% 2ft + ft 
13% Sft Saturn Airw 4 4 13ft 13% 13ft+ ft : 


7 10% 57% RCA ..JS 
b b lift |WS ...80 


GeoPac .45 


H FC ..JO 
Hercul ..JO 
Hercul ..JS ' 

Lilly 40 

Uity 

Lilly SO 


HowJn, .W 
How Jn .15 


149 Mi 72 13-U 701 3-U Uft sSt P 'jo 
4 1% 3 2% 3 3% 29% SSL 

11 5-16 « Ift 5 1% 29% 

? % • a 1 2% 53% ■ IS2S 


Merrtt .. 30 

Merrli ...3 
Merril ... 15 

Merrli ., 20 

Merrtt .. 25 

Mesa P .30 

Mesa P .JO 

Mesa P .25 

nr— "% ,■ 6Q 


7 S? Tetoyn ..40 

l 7% Tridvn .. *5 

- ^ -40 

■'* g Tetdvn 38% 


■ a J 5% a a 47% 

f JVk 3 3% 4 j 47% 

•6 2% 16 2% 23 215-16 11% 

■1 3-U 21 ft 19 ll-U 11% 

30 W 60 % 2113-16 19 

« ft l % b b n 

a a b b b b 71% 


123 13% .55 15 

2 26 a a 


252 7-16 158 1 3-U UQ11I-U 2S i'SSZ ■'»% 
24 3-U b b fa .fa 25 .*? 

1 9* fa fa b b 25 ISS? 

94 5ft ia 5% Vb b 25 "H 

172 1% 12S 2% 87 3ft 23 JmiiT * i* 


22 21ft 11 23- 

2 31% b b 


Alcoa ... 55 
Alcoa ... 40 
Alcoa ... 50 
Am Tel . J5 
AID Tet .AO 
Am Tet .jo 
A ll R ... n 
All R ... 90 
Alt R ...100 
Avon .... Js 
Awn ....40 
Avon ....45 
Avon ..,,50 
BankAm jo 


40 Yj 33 3* 14% 57% 

§4 iS b b b b 57 % rca 

11 7* a a 7 10% 57% RCA ..JS 

4 a TO % b b 2ft §*** — ff 

N 2 51 3ft 15 3% 21ft fears ...JO 

28 1-U 204 9-U 2C 11-16 21ft gars .—.70 

-Oct-. -Jan - - Apr - ■ Sperry .. « 

14 3ft 1 Sft b b 57% saw™ ...45 

4719-16 21 3 a a Sft Spotty ..JO 

15 7% a a a i nil SynZoc ..35 

• 187 ift 33 4ft » 4% 59% fvnZOe -30 

92 ft 135 1% 112 1% 59ft SynZDe -» 

31 9ft 1 « b b 59ft Iw?** 

5 21ft 12 22ft b b 101ft Svntex ..JS 


SPOYV .. 40 
b STA Spenv ...45 

a Sft Spotty -JO 

a DH SvnZoc ..35 


I W » » 4 144 5% 39 

348 * . 159 1% 60 2ft 37% 

13 <1 li b b b 27% 

U4 3ft «t 4% 31 5ft 27ft 

•J2 ft 1U 9-16 b b 63% 

« 5ft 24 7% 16 8% 43% 

W- ’J* “ 2ft 75 3% .63% 

7 7ft b b b b 47 

80 3% 31 5% a a 47 


10% 5% Soundri. J44 3 8* 8% 6V. - Ve 


9% 6% Scheb EriUO 8 a 7% 7ft 7%+ ft , 

8% 6% Sdienutt AO 5 2 S I • 


8* 5% Schrader JO 8, '51 7ft 7% 7ft+ ft 
11% 10% Sd Atlanta 13 37 16 15% U - ft 


ft 1?! 112*16 4 3% 


3% .43% 
b 47 
a 47 


24ft 20ft Soopetn JSe 4 
17 10% Seriwner JO 4 


1 23% 23* 23% 

2 14% 14% 


2lft 12% Scurry Rain » 2 17ft 17 17 % 

5ft 2% Seatoctr Co II A 2* 2% 2*+ % 


31 VW 8 4 

5 21ft 12 22% 
39 11% TO 14% 


72 4% 47 7% 3 9ft 1 01 ft Jaw# ..JO 


Tesoro ...15 


94 5ft TO 5% Vb b 23 "S 

J 44 ”1 niSM « r* TO W3,lM -*- ls 

^ I - 1 2W | k mf Wsf W'' .J# 

TO 3% 11 5W M 5W »ft T ttftSSd. 

57 1% a a a • 54% 


561 6* 244 

927 2 9-U 410 


■Betti S ..35 
BethS ...40' 


9 72 l| 71% 
5 204 7ft 71% 


Beth S ..45 

Betti S ..50 


29 11 b b b b 45%. ? -1*9 

91 4% 37 Ift b b 45% Twc n ..!» 

315 3 104 4% 37 Sft 45% ]!«* " ••** 

3091 1-14 105 2% 34 3W. 45% Tex In -130 

2 ft 331 9-U 3 2% .54 % UdMp; ..35 

2 6ft b b b b 4i* "It 

65 2% 5 4 a a 4lft UPtonn .M 


159 ll-U 521 5-16 11021-14 ilft I —3 


457 % 422 1 b b b 

888 1ft 224 2% b b . b 

J04 4% 63 5% b b b 

54< I W4 401 2ft 101 3ft 27% 

136 3% 107 . 4ft X 5% 27% 

224 13-U 191 1 7-16 TO 1% 15V. 
134 ft 47 % |3 9-U Uft 

74 11% . 2 14% b b 118% 

74 5ft 3 9ft a • 110% 

1 M% b b b b HB% 

63 2ft 7 3 a • 118% 

71 1% 10 9 b b 43ft 

253 4ft 73 5ft 7 Sft 43ft 

590 1ft 45 2ft 42 3ft 43% 

35 % b b b b 43% 


1ft ft SMbort Cp 5 15 13-16 % %-1-M 

15ft 5% SeaanAB JO .8 U 13%' 13% 13%-. % 


2. 13-16 SecMtg 1 nv .. 
2 11-14 Setigm ano .- 


6 1% 1% 1% I 

111 I - ft I 


23% 13ft SfllgLtt UP 6 14 17% 17% 17% - ft 


Aft 

4 Stmtch -Ut 

1 

333 

4% 

4% 

4%- 

% 

Aft 

3% Servian X 

8 

2 

6U 

Aft 

Aft- 

% 

4% 

3ft Servo Carp 

5 

5 

3ft 

3% 

3%+ 

ft 

4% 

2% ShaerS .ISe 

S 

3 

3 

3 

3 • 

ft 

14% 

13% SturanStt 1 

7 

3 

14 

13% 

Uft- 

ft 

12% 

7% Shawln JOb 

A 

11 

8% 

*% 

8ft.. 

■ ra 

13% 

iftShwH JOe 

3 

27 

9 

8% 

e%+ 

ft 

4% 

2% Shelter Res 


7 

2% 

2% 

2%.. 


7% 

3% srmdCo Jit 

5 

8 

6* 

Sft 

6ft- 

ft 


NEW 

YORH 

TIME 


19 ft 71 % X 7-16 14 

2 3ft 1 4 a a 18% 

a a 19 ll-U X IW 18% 


Brora ....10 
Bruns ...is 


Total volume 4452 . Open interest 171J48 

a-ttot traded. Wto option offend 

Salto tn TOCs, asl b prtmhirh (purchase trice). 


Bruns ...20 
Burt N ..40 


Burt N ..45 

Burl N ..a 


Often ... X 
CltfCP ...» 


X 

1-16 

b 

b 

b 

b 

41% 

50 

Ift 

40 

8ft 

b 

b 

lift 

291 

3ft 

74 

4 

22 

4% 

18% 

116 

% 

146 13-U 

45 

1% 

lift 

4 

5* 

1 

7ft 

b 

b 

44% 

23 

2ft 

14 

3% 

A 

4% 

44% 

46 

% 

11 1 3-U 

8 

2ft 

44% 

1 

Sft 

a 

a 

b 

b 

34% 


1 3% It 4ft _ 

Weverh .AS 42 % H 1% 2 2ft 42 

Nevertl -JO 2 3-U 23 *06 a 4 42 

Xerox ...6S 691 5% 79 7% a 9ft 63% 

Kerox ... TO 784 1% 235 ,3ft' 97 4.% 63% 

Kerox ...SO 309 1 3* 52 15% b . b 63% 

r <*4l Wrfume w OJ« ■ Open Mm-oat 1JV3J23 
a-Not tradad b-No option oftarod. 

Sales In loos, art is pr emiu m (purchase price). 


X Jl’/i Shnandh Oil 29 X 21% 21ft 21% 


Xerox ...66 


Ml 9-U 35 2 9-U X 3% 34% 


18% 10% 5herwd Mad 15 » lift 18ft lift 

3% 1% Shonwril In 34 2 3% 3% 3%+ ft 


15 lift Showogf JO 5 6 13ft 13 - 13 

,5ft 1 % ShulmTr En .. a 3ft 3ft 3ft- ft 


for al? 

your want a< 
needs 1 


7% 5* Slum* jo* 6 
4ft 3 Slkescp A 


1 7ft 7ft 7ft 

2 3ft 3% 3ft + ft 


10% 7% SkvCity -Mr 6 7 10% 10 10%+ % 

4% 2ft SoHtrgn . .. 15 2% 2% 2%- ft 

6 ft 3% Sorg Paper .. 5 4* 4* 4% 


[yj* O' iSO\ 









































































32 


THE. NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, XW- 


: .JgJ 


LIGGETT IS TO BUY (Travelers Insurance Net Is Up by 4.3% 
DIVERSIFIED COEPj As Its Operating Income Rises 1 12.5% 


Exchange of Stock Worth! 
$26.3 Million Planned 


. By HERBERT KOSHETZ 

The Liggett Group Inc., for-, . . ^ 

** Liggett ft Myers Inc., an-joper* tag J’ 2 J 


By CLARE M. RECKERT 
The Travelers Insurance! 
Companies, the nation's second.) Sum urm 
largest publicly owned insur- 
ance organization, realized a 
4.3 percent increase in second- 
quarter net income while its 


Merger 

News 


nounced yesterday an agree- 
ment in principle to merge the 
Diversified Products Corpora- 
tion of Opelika. Ala., into Lig- 
gett through an 
exchange of stock 
valued at about 
$26.3 million. For 
the merger about 
760,000 shares of 
Liggett common would be is- 
sued in exchange for ail the 1.6 
million shares of Diversified. 
Upon competion of the merger. 
Diversified would operate under 
its present management as a 
wholly owned subsidiary of the 
Liggett Group. 

Diversified Proucts manufac- 
tures and distributes health and 
physical fitness products and 
sporting goods. 

For the fiscal year ended June 
28, 1975, Diversified - earned 
*1.7 million on net sales of 
$24.6 million. For the nine 
months to March 27, 1976, it 
showed a net of $1.9 million oh 
sales of $32.8 million. 

Tbe Liggett Group, a diversi- 
fied company whose major, 
business is tobacco products, is 


uim. . 
a nun. revenues 
Nri Income . . 
Stars toms. .. 


percent, its mid-year report! 
disclosed yesterday. 

The Aetna Life and Casualty 
Company, the leading investor- 
owned insurance enterprise, 
had previously reported an 
increase of 119.4* percent 
in second-quarter net income. 
The two big companies showed 
;the most impressive recovery 
of the generally improved trend 
from the year-earlier period, 
when rates Jagged behind rising 
operating costs. 

Second-quarter net income of 
Travelers Insurance amounted 
to S34.2 million, or 78 cents 
a share, against $32.8 million! 
or ‘75 cents a share, last year. 
This year’s net income is after 
realized capita] losses of $1.5 
million, while the year-age net 
benefited from a $16 million 
capital gain. 

For the first half this year, 
net income climbed 55.2 per- 
cent. to $64.4 million, or $1.46 
a share, from $41.5 million, or 
93 cents, a year earlier. The 
1976 net is after a capital gain 
of only $200,000, while $11.6 
million of capital gains was in- 
cluded in the 1975 net income. 


also in spirits and wine, petj Operating earnings in the life 
foods and other products. Thejinsurance business improved 

over the first quarter this year 


Liggett & Myers Tobacco Com- 
pany is know for its L & M, 
Chesterfield, Lark and Eve 
brands of cigarettes. It reported 
net earnings of $36.2 million 
in 1975 on revenues of $813 
million. 

Ventron Agrees 
to. ThJokoI Merger 

The Ventron Corporation said 
that it had consented to the 
proposal of the Thiokol Corpo- 
ration to make a cash tender 
offer of S44 a share for a]], of 
Ventron's common shares out- 
standing. Ventron directors 
unanimously recommended that 
Ventron shareholders accept 
the Thiokol offer. 

In Boston, the Cabot Corpo- 
ration said it had not decided 
whether it would tender 1 09.- 
155 shares of Ventron which 
it had acquired from major 
shareholders at $36 a share. 
Purchased last week. Cabot said 
the 20 percent interest in Ven- 
tron was bought with the pur- 
pose of eventually acquiring 
control of the company. 

Butman Oil to Sell 
Australian Interest 

Burrnah Oil Ltd said in Lon- 
don that it had agreed to sell 
its 41.8 percent interest in its 
Australian subsidiary. Wood- 
side-Burmah Oil NL., to an 
Australian company, the 
Broken Hill Proprietary Compa- 
ny for $85.3 million. 

Woodside-Burmah has a 50 
percent interest in a natural 
gas discovery off the north- 
western shore of Australia. 

In a retrenchment program, 
Burmah Oil, which was close to 
defaulting on foreign borrow- 
ings of $650 million, has sold 
off assets to repay all but $34 
million of the debt. 


Rice Price Supports Raised 
For the 1976 Crop by 3% 

WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 (UPI) 
— Final rice support prices for 
the 1976 crop have been raised 
3 percent above preliminary 
rates announced in April, the 
Department of Agriculture an- 
nounced today. 

.Officials said the final sup- 
port loan rate for the crop 
would be $6.10 per hundred- 
weight, instead of the prelim- 
inary $6 level announced in 
April. 


and second quarter of 1975. 
Profitability was up in, the 
group accident and health 
areas, offsetting a drop in the 
first quarter, the company said. 
Operating earnings in the casu- 
alty-property business were 
$5.2 million in contrast to a 
loss of $S million in the second 
quarter last year. 


qtr.iwnuw . 
Kitlnwmt ... 
Stare wire. 

6 am. revenues 
Net income 
Stare uim. .. 


1976 1375 | 1V7S T5 

AMERICAN WATER WORKS LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF GEORGIA 

s 46*®*® s 44*00*00 1 Qtr. revenues s s Brauns 

3.900.000- 5,300*00 [Met inrun* . A 4.321 ,«4 B 2*08.150 

50c ' 70c | share cents 72c ■ 63c 

88*00*00 83*00*0)6 iHt. revenue ... 94,629*44 88.397*67 

4*00*00 6*00*00 Net Inrame A 9*51*32 0 74V&.877 

46c OOcJSiue earns. .... 1*6 1*2 

A — After aortal lasses of 5307*42. lor 
BRINK'S INC. OOWfer and 5164.866 for 6 months. 

32*86*00 5 | B-Aflte 

Zl?8*00 2*41*09 

73c Me 


QPEG PLEDGES AID 
OF $800 MILLION 


Shah Cautions U.S 


7 'at the request of the reporter^. 

Assistance to Developingjwas conducted in the Shah.Si 

(summer, home at Nowsharu,. 


' . '■ . - M » r „, c event that Timmy Carter is 

Continued From Page I, CoL Selected.; In fact, the Shah said 

the report was- "not as Bad" 




63*22*00 

4*69*00 

47C 


59.173,000 

4*62*00 

48c 


BAYUK CIGARS 

Qtr. site S 8*00*00 5 8.800,0® 

Net I name 64*00 A 177*30 

Shr. earns. 5c 12c 

6 nos. sain 15.108*00 15,900*00 

Nri Income A 84,000 A 209*00 

Shr. earns. 6c 14c 

A— Jtrtcr 345*00 sccnrhlK sain In 1976 
six months, f 137*00 ■ securities loss In 
quarter of 1975 and 5187*00 securities less 
In 6 months of J97SL 


. BETHLEHEM COPPER 

air. revs. S 18*00,000 s 

Net Income 975*86 

Shr. earns- 16c 

6 mas. revs 14*00*00 

Net income 1*00*90 

Shr. earns 22c- 

A— Restated. 


7*00*00 

697*82 

lie 

10.000*® 

1.100,000 

1>C 


CAE INDUSTRIES LTD. 

Otr. revs 334*00*®. 325,700*® 

Nat Income 736*® 840*® 

Share Nins 35c 40c 

LLOYD'5 ELECTRONICS INC. 

Dta sales 317*00,0® S15.TOO.OOO 

Net loss 269*® 3®*®, 

CALS PAN CORPORATION 

Otr. revs 37,650,0® 58,755*00 

Net (OK 633,000 A 320*08 

Stare earns 30c 

Year revs 32,925*® 34*03,0® 

Net loss 1,257,0® A 378*® 

Stare earns ... 3Jc 

A— Net Income. 


(Hr. to July 25 

Sales 

Net income . . . 
Stare earns. 

Nil of stares . 
26 weeks sate 
Net Income . . . 
Stare earns. ... 


Qtr. revs. 

CMI CORP. 
320*®*® 

326*80*® 

Net inconm . . 

- 1*00000 

1*M*00 

Stars earn* .. 

17c 

24c 

6 mos. revs- . 

35.700*00 

44*00*® 

Net Income .. 

1*00*00 

17®, 000 

Share earns ... 

19c 

4 at 

CHARTER MEDICAL 



317*00*® 

SI 3.700.0® 

Net Income ... 

382*® 

334*® 

Shore earn* . 

22c 

19c 

9 mos. ran. 

50*00*00 

38.700,000 

Net Income .. 

1,117*® 

1*29*00 

Share earns .. 

....t 67c 

. ** 


Penn Central Transportation 

The Penn Central Transpor- 
tation had an income of $1.1 
million in June, but expenses 
of SS.6 million left the net loss 
for the month at $7.5 million, 
its report showed yesterday. No 
comparative figures are avail- 
jable for the year-earlier period 
because last April 1, the com- 
pany’s major asset, the Penn 
Central Railroad, was turned 
over to a new corporation, 
drastically changing the nature 
of Penn Central Transporta- 
tion's business. Total • income 
reported by the company was 
$5.9 million for the month. 

Expenses include $6.6 mil- 
lion interest on obligations in- 
curred before the railroad was 
conveyed with other expenses 
of $2.1 million of debated ex- 
penses relating to rent on lines 
leased by the former Penn Cen 
tral Railroad. 

For the three months — April 
to June — the net loss was 
525.6 million, including income 
from ordinary operations of; 
$1.40,189 and other expenses of 
$25.7 million. Total income for 
the period was $15.2 million. 

COMPANY REPORTS 


COFFEE-MAT CORK— A 

Qtr. sales S 3 * 34*00 $ 2 . 279*00 

Net Income 221*® 147*® 

Shr. earns 13c 9c 

A — Approx. 5i percent owned by Flagstaff 
Core. 

C0TT CORPORATION 

Qtr. revs. 321*39,0® 322*86*® 

Net Income 155*00 608*00 

Stare earns Be Me 

A hot. revs 36*02*® 37*64.000 

Net Income 9,000 377,0® 

Stare earn 19c 


Countries Is Conditional [near the Caspian Sea, after boj 
« completed an afternoon of talks 

-ittcmxta a«* b Vat>\ Ti iwith Mr. Kissinger. The Sec- 
VIENNA, Aug. S TPtotry sat next to the Shah, 

5164,866 for 6 months. Sijfn * KcaSS °* dul1n S the 

$ 43*96 caudal turn tor einrter'lZatlOn Of Petroleum Exporting I , . • * 

PHD 5186*29 ertte .toss tor 6 monte. Countries pledged today to; c KSssirizer said little dur- 
macahbrews * FORBES co. I take the necessary measures).' “v- IUSS 7* CT „ ^ X 
* 21 *58 S ^m'lSS! 5001 !” t0 pTOTid?S^ million!^^ 

47*71*0. 47 , 10 * 00 , ^ conference, the Secretary 

Ministers of the op cartel S ; *wnijriir<»rtStates attached 


S99*W 
37c 


Nat inewhe. . 

Stare oams. 

6 mos. sate 
Net inroret . K4JO0 

Share earns. 20c 

MCINTYRE MINES LTD, 


Qtr. revenues 3 33*00** 3 26*00*00 

Net income 4*®*® - 8,700*00 

Stare earns. 1*7 3*7 

6 mos. revenues — 60*00*08 49*®*® 

Net income ft.ica.tea LW 

Stare earns 1*3 3.76 

A — Restated to reded restatement at re- 
sorts of 37* par cart owned FalambrlSre 
Nickel Minos, Ltd. . 

MCI COMMUNICATIONS CORP * 

Qtr. revenues S 12*®*® S 4*00*00 

Net loss A 1*00*® 7*00*00 

A — After sz*ra*n special credit. 


MERVYIT5 


. .$ 54,9®*® S 41*®*® 

- 1,736*® 1*66*® 

.. Me 38C 

.. 4*47,776 

.. 99,1®*® 

2*64*00 

60C 

MOV I SLAB -INC 
13 weeks wtas .. ..I 7*37*80 3 5,959*67 

Net Income A 120*62 A 121*97 

Stare earns Be 9c 

A— After tax credits of 354*47 tor 1976 
rnxrtir and 558*15 tor 1775 quarter. 
SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT CORP. 

Year sales 5109,935*® 5108*27*® 

Net Income 1*10.0® 925*00 

Stare earns, 1.03 50c 

MURPHY OIL GO. 

Qtr. net loss S 331*® A 3957*00 

Stare earns 15c 

6 mos. net income ... 190*00 2*00*00 

Stare earns. 3c 36c 

A— Net income. 

NATIONAL INDUSTRIES INC 

Otr. revenues 3209,99411® SI 93*00.0® 

Net income 4*49*® A «x67*0D 

.Stare earns. r -iOc ‘ SSc 

ft mos. revenues - .. 4l9*30.eao 3MVDC0*on 

Net income 5*00*® A 5,952*® 

Stare earns. 78c 81c 

A— After 379*00 less tram discontinued 
operations tor- euarter and 3205*00 loss 
from discontinued operations and -3270*® 
extraordinary less far 6 months. 


13 member countries made tte hrmnrtanee to relations 
pledge as their two-day meet-j ,__*_**_ h — **.«. 


ing ended at the Hofburg Pal- 
ace here. Security was tight to 
prevent a repetition of the ter- 
rorist raid on last December's 
OPEC oil ministers' meeting 
here, in which three persons 
were hailed and several-minis- 
ters were taken hostage and 
later freed in Algeria. 


said the ; United States attached , q^' L et me tell you this : 

—tin Che next 10 to' 12 years. 


as some, consider it 
He did seem annoyed atj 
what he took as. an effort 
to vgl Iran what was good for 
its de fense ' The Shah, has - ai- 
ways. resented any slights on 
WssoyeHgnty, and J?e was 
consistent f 
"The quesrion is that we. are 
a Sovereign' country," he said, 

“We are looking after our de- 
fense as you ffo, as the Soviets. 

do, the French or the GermansUp so far in. pj 
. . * vs,,< refusal of multina 


I - wouldn’t say bla 

, ----- .'s.V;" 

forced- prices,’ v.h* 


companies, aware 

j. 

current $2.5 bfll 


budget deficit,- are . 


further cut? in t 

■ _ 

Iranian heavy -on 

• • -V - . v 

fuel oils. . 


■ Some Easing w 

- " " _ ...i—' 1 _ . . •ti-’al 


On another key 
safe, of eight Amei 
power reactors' •; 
Shah indicated sot 
The deal, tmtii 
more than a year,. 


with Iran as well as to the 
crucial role lean plays in the 
security and balance of the 
whole area." 

The staff report, issued by 
Senator Hubert H. Humphrey’s 
Foreign Relations subcommit- 
tee,- 'has aroused considerable 
interest here because of the 


The finance ntfnites said 


we 'shall be wbat France, Ger- 
many,- England; are', today. So 
we have the. same basic Tights 
as -.you have to 'defend our 
country.” 

“We are the onl^ judge of 
what we need or not,” he add- 


essing of spent : J : 
mans see a sugges 
cannot be trusted ' 
nuclear weapons, 
their country is ; ■ 
nuclear treaty ' 
spread of nuclear 
The Shah, insisr 


ed. "If you supply us. witiu he would ndt ac • 
' — -“"‘Iranian sovereig 

that a multinatia 


we need, O.K., we are) 
happy.” However, he went on. 


a communique their pledge ™ ’American supplies were re- 1 plant would, b 

haveiaricted; -there ere --or n»e«|lrae. he srfd-wc 

75*00*00' 

2*S2*n 
55c 


contribute -the e^valentefetjb^ ^ ^ whlls diepm^^si" 


millibn” to 1 
. International 
Development 


least $600 
Rome - based 
Agricultural 
[Fund. 

Of the $800 million, $400 mil- 
lion is earmarked for the Devel- 
opment Fund and S40O -million 
for direct OPEC loans to devel- 
oping countries. 

The OPEC fund was set up 


ing some findings, was matter- 
of-fact, and declined the oppor- 
tunity to criticize American 
Democrats or express concern 
about future relations in the 


stricted; ...... . . 

sources available in- the world] thpig . »t could t 


for us to go and shop there in 
their shops.* 1 1 ' 


spread; since if w 
silly If every 06 : 
or thr^e silly litfl '. 


Amex Prices Off 
5A“SS?rS! Li 8 hf Ytinme; 


details. 

Hamid Zaheri, the OPEC 
spokesman, told- a news confer- 1 
ence he expected the fund to 
start accepting loan applica- 
tions Monday. Tbe fund's com- 


NASDAQGednsO.13 


Stock prices dwindled in 
light volume on the American 
mittee is to meet over the jstocfc Exchange yesterday, with 


weekend to work out guide- 
lines. 

Mr. Zaheri -said he understood 


DAIRY QUEEN STORES INC 
12 weeks to July 6 

I Seles 3 10,100.000 $ 9.700*00 

Net Income 530,736 518*47 

Stare earns. 32c 32c 

40 weeks sate 29*00*® 26,500.000 ™ 

Net Income 859*55 824.144 OFFSHORE CO. 

Stare earns. 52c 50c 

Qtr. revenues ... 

EARLY CALIFORNIA INDUSTRIES ' •• 

Qtr. sales 3 22*37*® r 21 .943*® 5 n i r * 

Ket Income 547*® A 134*® • 

Stare rams. .. .. 21c 

A — Nel loss a Her s2M*M loss from dis- |S,lire wrnSl 
continued operations. 


NATIONAL TEA CO. 

Qtr. to June 19 

Sate - $348*00*00 $331*00*® 

Net Iks 1*79*® 1*85*® 

2< ,w«*s sales ..... 689*00,000 661.1W*09 

Net loss ... 6,900,0® 3*00*00 

NORTHERN NATURAL GAS CO. 

Qtr. revenues 3287*®*® 5248*00*00 

Net Income 26*W.0M 25*62.000',,. - , . 

Stare earns. A 1.17 A i.Utbillion is pledged. With S400 


the market value index dosing 
at i03^43 down 0.18. 

In the over-the-counter mark- 


the industrialized couotriesiet the i^ASDAQ industrial index 
were still $70 million short of moved upwards; dosing at 95.- 
the S600 million to be pledged 57, up 0.13. 
to the Dex-elopment Fund- Syntex, the pharamaceutical 

The Development Fund is to maker, led the most active list 
become operational when Sljon volume of 123, 50Q shares. 


6 mos. revenues .... 672.1®*® 564*®*® 

Net Incoma 85,158*00 66*69,0® 

Stare tarns. .. !..A 3.79 A 2.95 

A— Adlustod tor 2-lor-i ■ stock split In 
November 1975. 


For Periods andod June 30 
unless artiorwhe Indicated 


1976 


7973 


ABERDEEN MANUFACTURING 

Otr. tales 3 22*62.212 3 17*00.501 

Net Income 609*23 373,381 

Shr. earns. 52e 32c 

A mos sate 41*82.913 M.70fclI5 

Net Income 1*95*88 797.777 

Shr. cams. .... 93c 61c 

Stare ml adlknled tor 5 percent stock 
dividend March 1976. 

AERO-FLOW DYNAMICS INC. 

Olr. sales .. 314*40*00 313.749.0® 

Net income 341*® 373.0® 

Stare earns 36c 39c 

6 mos. sales 28,808*8a 26*65 MS' 

Net Income 719*® 733« 

Stare earns 82c 77c 

AETNA LIFE > CASUALTY CO. 

Qtr. net Income .A SS3*22*» B 316,183*® 

Slw. earns. 1.® 73c 

A— Alter 363*® itallad canltal tain. 

B — After si,<SI*M capital gain and S276r- 
0® utraordlnarv ictarra. The company's 
share of Hie loss In toe Kaiser Aetna real 
estate partnership was 36 million, compared 
vrtlh S2J mini® a rear am. 

In Itw report last weak Itw floor* was mf| 
given as a loss. 


FIRST NATIONAL STORES 


3 44.7®*® 3 40 *00*® 
. 6,200*00 7.500 *0o 

91c 1.® 

. 93,600,0® 79.9®*® 

. 73,9®*® 14*00.000 

zm 104 


million from the OPEC fund 
and $530 million from the in- 
dustrialized nations, the total 
j would stand at $930 million. 

The price of oil was not dis- 
cussed at 
OPEC oil 


Qatar in December and may de-Uy^ the company announced 
Icide then whether to change ^at its directors and directors 

.«»«. , OVERMYER CORP. tfnsSrSl mcE^JR& hM VOted f ? f & ° f -*S 

s24S*oaBa) j232*M,®o.Qhr. sues s a*®*® s 7,iM*w! cr U“e U“- last raised the : . wo comparaes. One share of 


Qlr. sate 

Net Income ~ A 67.000 B 3,289*® 

Stare earns 6c 

A— After 313*® lax credit. 

B-Net loss. 

FOREST OIL CORPORATION 

Qtr. revs. 313.700*® 38.100*® 

Net Income 3 *00, MO 1,5®*® 

Share earns 52c 21c 

6 mas. revs. 24,1®*® 16*®, 0® 

Net Income 4*00*00 3*00*00 

Shire earns 92c 44C 

GREAT AMERICAN INDUSTRIES 

Qlr. revs 3 11.995*86 $ 9*72*63 

Net IncaiM 579*75 428.1® 

Shr. earns.- J9c 28c 

6 mos. revs. 22*35*09 16*23, <23 

Net Income 1*88.796 711.320 

Shr. earns 72c 46c 

HAMPTON INDUSTRIES 

Qlr. sales 318*00*® 311*00*00 

Net Income 858,203 263*27 

5tare earns 52c 15c 

6 mos. Mies 36,100.0® 22.900.0® 

Net iiKome 2*00*00 482,227 

HUDSON BAY MINING I SMELTING 

Qtr. revs 3126,1®. 0® 3 61,900.0® 

Net Income 6*®*® 7*®,0W 

Shr. earns. 65c 75c 


Net into mo 
Share earns. . 
6 mos. sales... 
Net Income .. 
Stare earns. . 


8*93 
lc 

15.275*40 

140*51 

12C 


2 ®*«! price by 10 percent OcL l.j Flagstaff will be exchanged for 
13 * 77 * 85 1 1975. jeach share of Coffee-Mat 


OZARK AIR LINES INC 
Jtme revenues . 

Nel income . . 

Stare earn. . . 

6 mos. revenues 
Mel Income . . 

Share earns. ... 

A— Nel loss. 


*“«; Secretary General M. O. Fe-r whic ii currently is 51 percent 
27 lyide of Nigeria said OPEC was L^ ned bv Flagstaff, a food 


Asked to justify the need for! question 

so many and highly sophisti-iP t 1 S(> 0 er s -aod -- 
cated weapons as 

F-14 fighters and . ximM-uMe- . UaeiM-' 
class destroyers, the. Shah said Sat^SS '' 
that "some of the countries that 
border tii with less than one- wSTrSstS^. 
third the population .have as werenS^Ma,-- 
mariy tanks and aircraft as we S ' 

have.” . singer, his wffi . 

An Allusion to Iraq David visited th 

So 1 should tell yew,” .hje ca ^ ar .i >r ^ 
continued, “that we have three Bandar .Pahlayi- ' 
times less than we should have. ? ea * " ratc °® 

Do you realize that around us e ®? s ,^ e ^'P^ 
are MIG-23- -and MlG-25's fly- 
'ing?” He was alluding to the L 

aircraft of Iraq. Iran's relations sarty .uus even 
with its neighbor have been gex aUended a 
tense, though somewhat im- p 15 uodbr byth- 
proved in the last year’. ter who will: be 

The Shah was asked about ^° rn ? r 5 0 '®’ 

Iran’s - interest in bartering " 

some erf its oil for weapons sys- ^ , at 

tad^dtaTi WoS-fiM Wfia)*-; ;t has ordcTed. TIubJb «t c«wrat»n.. 

^ - • • 'been speculation in the West 

that Iran is discussing barter 
as a way of cutting the price 
of oil, so as to help increase 
its exports and pay its debts.. 

He said, however, that Iran 
would not make any price con- 
cessions as part of a barter 
arrangement. “We are not that 
broke yet,”, he said. “We are 
borrowing to help other coun- 
tries — India, Egypt and many 
African countries.” 

"We are not yet broke 
enough to be forced to pay — 


at 21,800 for 26*4, the low 
price of the day. Syntex closed 
at 27^, down 1 %. 

Second on the most active 
list was Flagstaff, which closed 
this meeting. The[ at 414 down J 4 of a point on 
ministers meet in j volume of 64,400. Earlier in the 


-. • Vftb- 










-. '/ j? . 




negotiating to rent an office I mkrketine and distribu- 

$ 13.™^ sn*®*® - bu ,|d ing here, thus ending! U(>n company. Coffee-Mat} 
76 *® 4 »S 6t*aa*® ■ speculation that the o3 cartel makes dispensing machines fori 
2 . 6 aaO 10 A 612*®i' v0u ^ move its headquarters! ffeCi ^ 3 , snac ks and candies. 
38c .. ifrom Vienna for security rea-j Curtis bathes, which re- 

sons - -ported yearly net of 66 cents a 

share closed at 4, up %• The 


6 mos. revs. 
Net Income . 
Slir. earns. . 


195*00*® IM*®*® 
7*®*W 14,8®, 0® 
73c 1.48 


nfTERNATlDNAL GENERAL INDUSTRIES 

Olr. revs. J19.BW.000 $14*00*® 

Net income l*m*M 1.1®*® 

Stare Nms 84c 62c 

6 mu. revs. 39,100*® 33,1®*® 

Net Income 2JH0.0® 2*00.000 

Stare earn* 1*2 1.14 

KEYSTONE CONSOLIDATED 

Qtr. Hhs S 95*®*® 3 79,200*® 

Net Income : 3«mo® 2.BW.MO 

Shr. earns. • 1*5 1*7 

Year sales 323*®*® 337*00.000 

Net Income 6*84*W 11.365*® 

Shr. esms 3*6 6.05 

KNAPE & VOGT MANUFACTURING CO. 

Qlr. sate S 9*96*83 ■( 9,144*89 

Net income 782.943 715*43 

Share urns. J7e 52c 

Year sate 39,711,976 34*93*73 

Nel Income 3*62*® 2*95*® 

Stare earns- 2 jO 1.95 

LEE PHARMACEUTICALS 

Qtr. $ete 31,7®*® 3935*® 

Nel Income 37*00 A2B*M 

Stare earns 2c ■■ 

9 mov sate 3,9®*® 3,2®*® 

Net Income 7S*fi3 127,000 

Share earns 4c 7c 


PARAMOUNT PACKAGING ■ 

Qfr. sate $ 8.900*00 S 8.300.0® 

Nel Income 191*23 504,755 

fStare earns. 19c 49c 

6 mas. sate 17.2O0.D0n 15,9®*® 

Net Income 465*56 649*52 

Share wras. 45c . B2c 

POLYMER MATERIALS INC. 

Olr. sate 3 13.131*® 3 8.631*® 

Net Income . ... 239*00 247*® 

Share earns. ....... 21c 21c 

6 mos. sales 23,979*® 16,541*® 

Net Income 288.0® 392*® 

Stare earns. .. . ZSc 34c! 

RELIANCE FINANCIAL SERVICES CORP. , 

.Qlr. revenues ..... 5205*03*00 3182*14*®! 

Nel Income A 13,199.0® B 1*75.0® 

6 mos. revenues ... 396*50.0® 358*40,0® 
Net income . . A 18.994*® B 10*31*® 
A— After 51.157*00 net nalUea «afn 
Inveshnenls and S2*14*M extraortmarv In- 
come tor noarler and 36,929*® net reallmd 
sain on Investment and 52.975*® ertraor- 
dlnarr Income tor 6 months. 

B— ARer SI *00*00 net realiied gain on 
Invesmwilf and S604*® .extraordinary income 
tor « wrier and 35*43.0® net realized gain 
on Investments and 32*48*® extraordinary 
Income tor 6 months. 

SEAGRAVE CORP. . 


Changing Auto Industry Facos Inquiry 


Continued From Page 25 

blows shook top management 
to the core, that instead of 
going off on their traditional 
Florida vacations at the end of 
December, they huddled in 
meetings and decided to radial- 
ly compress the time to revamp 
their whole product line. 

"We never moved so fast," 
Elliott M. Estes, the president 
of G.M., recalled. 

A smaller version of the 
Cadillac, the Seville, and a 
minicar, the Chevette. were 
brought from the drawing 
board to production in the 
record time of less than two 
years. All of G.M.’s big cars 
were to be lightened by up to 
1,000 pounds by this fall, a pro- 
gram that, after a few hesita- 
tions, came out on schedule. 

Cost of $3 Billion 

In 1977, G.M. will come out 
with new compact care and in 
197S with new subcompact and 
other small cars. The whole 
program will cost roughly £3 
billion. 

None of the other auto 
makers have been able to fol- 
low the pace set by G.M., which 
itself had to go to the public 
and barrow $600 million to fi- 
nance the changes. > 

At best Ford, Chrysler and 
American Motors, which have'l 
less resources and t lower 
profitability, have had fo pick 
their spots and concentrate on 
a particular line of cars, but 
not one of them can match the 
total revamping in such a short 
time. 

In hindsight, some top execu- 
tives, such as Lee A Iacocca, 
the president of Ford, is glad 
that Ford did not follow G.M. 
into the subcompact market 
that fast. The Chevette has not 
come near even the modest 
sales goals set by G.M. 


But Mr. Iacocca concedes that 
he would have preferred to 
have a minicar to market, but 
cash was short and Ford did 
not develop all the products it 
would have liked to. 

As the industry has recov- 
ered, G.M. has been the leader. 

Its market penetration, which 
slipped right after the energy 
crisis, to 4S.S percent of the 
domestic market, has increased 
considerably this year at the 
expense of tbe other three auto 
makers led by soaring sales of 
the intermediate cars and the 
rcovery of sales of its big cars, 

G.M.'s market share has been 
54.9 percent for the first six 
months of this year. 

Top G.M. executives talk of 
getting 60 percent of the do- 
mestic market They are back- 
ing heavily on the smaller sized 
new standard cars to be intro- 
duced this fall, which will have 
the same interior space, but 
will be much lighter and have 
better fuel economy. 

Thomas A. Murphy, the 
chairman' of G.M., unlike past 
chairmen who feared antitrust 
actions, has not been shy about 
going out for a larger market 
share and has repeatedly 
vowed to take as much from 
competitors as possible. The 
other three auto makers fear 
that if G.M. should ever take 
the gloves off it could pose seri- 
ous problems for them. 

One of the biggest clubs that 
G.M. has is that because of ns 
size, it sets auto prices. None 
of its competitors can be too 
much out of line with G.M. 

and hope to keep their custom- j are j n one 0 f t ^ e best* positions 
ers. jin their history to argue that 


smaller, their costs are high 
when compared to G.M. Yet 
they cannot bring their prices 
up higher than G.M.'s to re- 
cover these costs. 

In fact, there is agreement 
among the competitors that 
G.M. has is that, because of its 
creases and absorbed costs, a 
benefit to consumers, but a bur- 
den on its competitors. There 
is also a view that, if G.M. 
wanted, it could cut its prices 
and absorb higher casts and 
survive but probably drive 
Chrysler and American Motors 
out of business. One observe* 
from a competitor termed G.M. 
“a monopoly, but a benevolent 
one.” 

The F.T.C. and the Justice 
Department, who are expected 
to focus on G.M. in thfe$£ inves- 
tigation, are catching the indus- 
try at a key time of transition. 
They will find top G.M. execu- 
tives asking, “Why pick on us 
novrf” They will argue thatj 
they are innovating, competing 
fiercely and already are con- 
strained enough by Federal 
regulations. 

It is a feeling shared by the 
other three producers, who 
would prefer to sing it out-with 
G.M. without help from the 
Government. 

The last time the F.T.C. in- 
vestigated the industry, com- 
pleting its report in 1939, it led 
to no litigation. A Justice De- 
partment effort in the 1960’s 
to break up G.M. by possibly 
forcing it to divest itself of the 
Chevrolet division has lan- 
guished. 

The present effort comes at 
a time when tjie four producers 


Last January, for example, 
Ford rescinded 'a 2.2 percent 
increase after G.M. did not fol- 
low in the rise. Because the 
other three competitors are 


they are straining their talents 
and resources to the limit to 
respond to a changing marfeetj 
and to compete among them- 
selves and with the importers. 


olr. sales 3 26*02,243 3 26.290*69 

Not Income B 682.527 A 667,105 

Stare earns 46c 

„ tons. Mte .... 50*18*79 

Net Income B 933*35 A 853*32 

Share Barns. 63c 58c 

A— A Her 311,959 Income Trim discontinued 
oneralions tor Quarter and '57,741 loss Iran 
discontinued operations for 6 months. 

.0— Alw 5145*® income Horn proceeds 
of life Insurance nailer. 

G-fiesfatod tor discontinued operations. 

SEAWAY FOOD TOWN INC. 

«rt£- sate S 57,700*® 5 55.1®*® 

Net Income 620*33 1,200*00 

Share earns 568 1.® 

9 mos. sales I69*oo.ooo I55*oo,osa 

Nel Innune 7*00*00 2*00*00 

Stare tarns. 1*7 2.19 

SIMKIN5 INDUSTRIES INC 

Qtr. sate .........£15*20*08 3 11*82.186 

Net Income 971*56 965*10 

Stare cants, 55 1 54c 

9 mos. sate 43*62*52 28.151*07 

Net Income z 272*40 . 1,736,260 

Share cams. ; 1.28 98c 

TENSOR CORP. 

Qlr. sate $ 1*59.218 3 1*11,258 

Net Income 10,261 -22.277 

Share earns 2c 5c 

6 mos. sate 2*91,293 Z*16*I9 

Net toss - 4*74 6*38 

"TRAVELERS CORA 
Qtr. net Income. . .A 334,2®*® B 332*00.0® 
Stare earns. ... 78c 7Se 

6 mos. nef income A 64*00*00 B 41*00*® 
Share earns. 1.46 93c 

A-Afler 31*®*® net realiod carltal 
loss tar quarter, and 3200*® net realiied 
capital gain for 6 months. . 

B— Alter -net realized capital gains of SM.- 
000,0® tor quarter and 511*00,0® for fi 
ntan]h&- 

VERNITROH CORP. 

Qlr. sate 3 13*01,174 S 12.789*22 

Net Income 744*96 A 747,114 

Stare cams.' 18c 17c 

6 mos. Hies 26,919*84 25*31*66 

Net income 1.480*41 A 1.752*59 

Stare earn. 34c 41c 

A— After extraordinary credits Of 5100.000 
lor quarter and 35®*® tor. 6 months. 

WALTER E, HELLER INTERNATIONAL 
Qtr. gross Income . 5 79*®*® 5 78*®*® 

Net Income 7.2M.8® 7*80*00 

Shr. earns 62c «C 

ft mos: grass Income TSB*wwa® 163.200.000 

Net Income 14*00*® 15,000,000 

Shr. earns. 1-25 1*1 

WASHINGTON NATIONAL' CORP. 

Qtr. revenues 3142,700*® 5 97*00*® 

Net Income A 5*58*® B 3*71,000 

Stare nrns. 83c 4® 

i nis, revenues .... 298.no*® 191,700*® 

Net income A 9*98*® B 5,911*001 

Stare Nrns. 1*1 82c 

A— After- realized gains on Inv est ment s of 
3706*® for quarter and $N2*N tor 
6 months. 

B— After realized mins on Investment! 
uf 186*00 for quarter and 3126*00 tor 
6 nranlhs. . 

WEATHERFORD INTERNATIONAL INC 
.A 

Otr. revenues 3 W.1MUJ00 3 11.7®*® 

Net tnconu 1*54*00 1*99.0® 

Stare earns 32c 43c 

6 mos. revenues .... 36*00*® 21*00*00 

Net Income : 2*00*® 2*®*® 

Stare wins 60c • 75c 

No.- of shares . 4.200*00 3*00.000 

A— Results include oecrallons of Lamb 
industries, Inc,, acquired October l, I97S 
for 1 million stares of common stock. 

WILSON BROS. 

Otr. sain $ 14*00*00 $ 11.900*00 

Nel income 360*00 9,0® 

Stare earns 13c 

6 mu. sate .. .. 33*00*® 24*00*00 

Net income 1,100*00 328,003 

Stare oams 41c 12c 

WORLD AIRWAYS 

Qfr. revenues 3 2] *00 *00 3 30.100*00 

Net lost 945*® A 2.2®, 0® 

Stare earns !2c 

6 mos. revenues . .. 47,500*00 S5JOO.QOO 

Net ton 1,900*00 A 3*00.000 

Share earns ... 39e 

j A— Mel Income. 


SIC. MAY MODIFY 
C'OmiNG ROLE 

Continued From Page 25 

commission decides that the 
confirmation requirements for 
brokers cannot be relaxed, 
“then we must jnake an effort, 
under our - own authority, 
through the bank regulatory 
agencies, or by legislation, to 
require the same of banks." 

Of the bank regulators, with 
whom he said he had met in 
recent months, Mr. Hills said 
in response to a question from 
Senator Williams, "I have every 
reason to believe thev will open 
_ their minds to this issue." 
44 * 29 ^ 1Mr ’ als0 reflected com- 
- mission concerns about bank 
incursions into the securities 
business by emphasizing that 
it had only responded to techni- 
cal legal questions in not ob- 
jecting to the bank-sponsored 
automatic investment, employ- 
ee stock-purchase and divi- 
dend- reinvestment plans set up 
so far. Economic and public 
policy questions had not yet 
been addressed, he said. 

IF the S.E.C. decides to seek 
legislation bringing the banks 
under tight rules, an important 
feature would be to force them 
.to take responsibility for deter- 
mining that a given investment 
was suitable [for eachi ndividual 
investor, Mr. -Hills indicated. 

This would be in line with 
a comment . Senator Williams 
made Wednesday after hearing 
Chemical's proposal. If the bank 
doesn't take any hand in offer- 
ing advice/ he said in effect, 
how .can it know whether a 
contemplated investment is 
suitable? 

‘A Great Big Gap" 

“I just see a groat big gap 
in investor protection,” Senator 
Williams said- 

A Williams aide also held that 
an investor would not be as- 
sured of the best execution 'if 
all Chemical's business went to 
one broker who agreed to low 
commission rates for small' ord- 
ers with the knowledge that 
there would be a very large 
total. 

Chemical also considered, 
but then abandoned, an idea 
to provide a list of stocks from 
which its customers could 
choose. Mr. Hills today offered 
his opinion that this might well 
be. improper. 

“When banks provide a list 
of .20 or 30 stocks approved 
for customer purchase in an 
automatic investment service, 
or when they provide invest- 
ment information about indus- 
tries and typical slocks in 
those Industries, there is 8 
necessary implication that a 
purchase of any one of those 
SsLocks might not be a bad 
idea," Mr. Hills said. 

In a related development, the 
Mureicipal Securities Rule-Mak- 
ing Board filed with the S.E.G 
a rule requiring specific in- 
formation for customers con- 
firmation on muncipel securities, 
which banks have, been re- 
quired to furnish since May 20. 


company is in the audio en- 
tertainment field. 

Shares of Daniel Industries 
Closed at 19 off ^IxTa news 
story the company president 
said’ its third quarter profit 
would be 15 percent ahead of a 
year ago. The company makeaj 
fluid measuring devices. 

Ozark Airlines gained % to 
close at 4%, following a re- 
port that its net for the first 
six months was 3S cents, com- 
pared with a loss in the same 
year-ago period. 

American Express led the 
most active list in the over 
the-counter market with 127. 
600- shares. They closed at 
39%, up %. 

Volume on the Chicago Op- 
tions Exchange yesterday was 
52,564, compared with 57,029. 
while on the Amex the con- 
tracts handled totaled '18,663, 
compared with 18,390. 


SAVVY STOCK MARKET 
TECHNICIAN FOR fflREH 

Mttft ulm night wl kO do your nnrU 
ho n .w fc ■tek yo» itap! Wffl Wfcr Mchtaa! 
raft* report to pour note ppMon*. ter. 
uoRftm, etate. Soport ^ on pwdidi m 

A» oremte. Yore dboore to ooodo Is* Nghl 
dnirtowy. to note and door your nM B* on 
lop o» tho rente ogoinl Spacer when to refivn 

ymraAM.GaUte212-9M-0400. 


PLAN NOW T- 

0WN.YC 
BUSIN EJ- 






.t-.-rp-; V 

— Jl.-tr" '' j 
■ '• v " 

- 

• - 

- * -A 


Augut 

Hofr 
80 Cl! 
Hotnp" - ' 


Browse 
Get Free 

ADMES 
PROC 
MAIN UNr 

(215) 




NOTICE 

ARLINGTON COUNTY, 
VRGflUA, 

is oRoratg tor. sate a 37,988 
square-toot site In too RossJytr 
commerriel high-rise district. Im- 
mediately across the Potomac 
River from Washington. D.C. The 
site is zoned C-0 (maximum den- 
sity) anf a site plan has been ap- 
proved tar a 1 6-stary bunding, with 
over 132.000 square leet ol office 
apace. Sato by negotiation. Can 
Mr. Rico f703] 558-2236 or write 
Ik Department ol Transporta- 
tion, 1400 North Courthouse 
Road, Arlington, Virginia 22201. 
Attention: Mr. Rte«. 



WAITED GASOLINE 

LARGE QUAMTHIES Rita TIMES 
WE BUY doaouts. WMs jdijco nHn- 

tetrad Bart WM.-BM 3501 

Weil established factory 

In Puerto Rtop ImWhuJwI 
work, on Urnttaes & “ 
tow trice ownurris. 

88M6W614 

WHOLESALE ONLY 

omRiNas 

TO BUYERS 


ATTN Hustlers & Peckfiers 

Mwi St, Corntr taster It, NY 212- 
0664839 


Id 

sires 

tore. 


Royal Pro-Keds 

most rotors ' 


y Wtalcsole sh^" 


1-9*00. 


shxfctjl 

staeratol- 


. ALUMINUM PANEL CUPS 

vsot kf tostillgttofl of wood i metal 

mi^» lnrV 

L.E.D. WATCHES 

3, 4 6 S toKtlon, awl I able Mr Imme- 

BUTTONS . 

orer 15*® tares at assorted J»Wan 
Huttons. 50* WOM. 1201 19164230 

LADIES BOOTS 

ftS* 


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Course 

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I ' Biya .wjiit'in ta tm lire) manmne ;. him Ium not 1 ' 

■ defc»Wr >1 let h’.i l ~'Cl ifj;-. . iliri-jl, [■ .r|r i HWte rt J 

■ ftfttctary ihW ol 5! n'l t*l *i^S, 1 1 ..-,*4 aj .1 rk»t/, £4£J . 

| ■ H>unijy wrre^ird 3‘JMmli I'ji thiiwiy on «>!/ 




'/■ J: y '*»*>•; Va'j; 



T\ 


' ■ ■ . . * '-ZnAjtm 


■1 f- ii :t- 






* 

v,-- 

te- ; ^ ..... 


JinS£$2 


fi’-ate;.* 


1 . . • . AH| E] 

?> SSm£RCUL LOCATION 



HI I Biases* CtaegR ' m* 

. ELMHURST N?MACTS 

tp Grind Ajrwe. Open Set aTSun 1-A. 


IflDtBM QOMftT 


THE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 

~ lllj Roasts -Q ombs “ 111 I tases-lbssaii-MM U3 


TTE- 2 BRNSIMS •• 

ejtaetitua. WU sacrifice 

~ 16onl a&zns 

iTfOffBWAYl - 

■ — I -t* n* haunt 


.VEWSiDE REAL ESTATE 



4URK 1UD trt, »rd»t 
-.ti m» + owner duplex 
•■ ■MmsM^aeUl thra- 


ll 

rr forest av 
GIVEAWAY 


M^eaj^jrms^W. 1 ear w, S3V 
?•' Ag^URSTFitflC IH3452I 

BAYStDE-SACHfiCE 


2624134 

EUWUttSr— VFAM OR BOND- 
STONE £-nn Bungalow + 2 tlnsftd nits 

dwim 

42*^252 or W5186 

Ln | wd,det2 

inB&KXsr 

BimaMtaaBp” 

eu^K|t j— . wmetd^eed 

|jii3|g Ss "|l 

BsP^sfurs 

— FUr5HIKG-HILLCRESTS7M» 

hsiant, jar. mm floe exfirss. 


FOREST HILLS, REGO PK i VI C 

DETACHED COLONIAL' 


Sis, oakwd 
uni 


HUB, 897-2700 

j KMBOUEEH5BLVP BWQPWfc 

t FOREST HILLS 


Eadows-J sty Cm Cod. 

I Bfts, 2 bmrros. ami sirao/ 
icrili. Low Queens : 

sauoo-wnre 

■AM M.M atiac$, Vfi 
lln bum. Iram occ. 5* % 


isK 


HIUCRESTvIc Corerldt S4&00D 

IRK'Bmj 

large twins, fully equtpoed eat-ta 
Midi, main (Inr power rm + Hotly 


NORTH FLUSHING 

i 1 tarn, « nro. a BR, 1 'h Wfe, trim Hit 
i rtn, wntry^EIK. Ml Mini, I ear gar, 
Ira, M*m Excel and. Grand ma. 
everything. Owner: 7084735. Pnn 


QNSV1U.-6RMBRKCOL 
rood kn, lo «C LR, w/ wtpt tt rwwt.- 
nn dvrin, l'.-j m/or-sanOO owe 
J79-W19 

Reno nt creWExd^Mtir/iitr, 6, mao 
rms, 3 b*in5+4 rms;2 Mrms+hniw 
ftopsmt, Bdnwr.nevr decs 1 25^)00 or 

ASCAN REALTY 52M600 
RICHMOND Hia NO 

ff AAl-WM; flfctB-w77 

Richmond Hill Semi oH brie 

^JWLyasheol, walk IND wb S35r 


BAWILLE-Must Be Seen 

I or Rent 10 m HWUnrii . ovl bch. 


BAYV1LLE-1 5 Yr Brie Ranch 
3 BBS, parage, bunt, tot, borders 2 
m -* a - 

BAYVULE-MOTHER DTE 1 

eld like nevMsreell ioc, ; 


am* 

r. Lae J. Sraim^WtiUWO 


7, 1976 

BOT-HcwB-Stffafc . U3 1 1 

BR00KV1L1E NORTH SHORE * 

exclusives 


; i f, 1 ' . I: : ^77] i > i .ttttj 


■OPEN HOUSE 



r-r-r 


GARDEN CITY 


PHOTO FILES 
ENHANCE FREE 


sum® si 

Quality era' 


I Mrnn, S bths, cCTtral elr, 

metric eve. unto terrace. 

5M£!0USC0NTElttP 
ty eraftsnanshfe ovenned 
rra w i^in.country kit. 3 



Cntrl 

Sfw 
bsmt. 

DlX HILLS PRIME VANDERBILT Area 

UNBELIEVABLE BUY! 

Rndi, 4BB, Ut. Dfi, El K 

an Vi ac '' 

! undovndipriwlr. 

* HOMES BY CHHSnNE,lnc 

DIX 


E W1 LUST ON WHEATLEY sqjOOL 

EXCLUSIVE NEW LISTING 

CcttfhaUCal. «LL| wiWioHd Jam 
rm, tmd DR. mofln E/i Uidi. 2 am, 3 
IgeBR^att par, Indsaxl lot. low taxes. 

VALENTINE AGENCY 

i <8 


^“WcoNDirr^ 

KJ. CUTTING 516-746-5220 

140 HILLSI D£ as/e willistonpk 


ipaSm^Bfa^^HxSe o»ld 
room, wry lame oloi. 


dai FRANKLIN AVE. 


GLEN COVE RANCH 
3 BR. immoc amd, beaut land- 
sepd & fenced. Mod eat-in kit, ■ 
2 car gar, panld fam rm, nr 

chis schls, low tax, $ 52 , 500 . 
Print only. 516 - 671 - 9020 . 


an oar. se> 
Mimundad 


ESTATE COLONIAL „ 
Hilltop 14 acre. 5 BR.3MM, be limn, 
sun iwm 2 car par. SV9J&0 


^ ^ 

|:^V ; 

.r 

- 

: . v 

y 

t&*? r *•; 


:■ r 

.•i? tw.h 

v-- 

* * 

• 

U- -■ 

•r>'t 

fc;- •••':- ■ 

k'ii-r -a*r ■ 
?>•*:•• 
it . v - 




















































I 






fauseyfessag-Saffri 113 

Cont'd From Preceding Page 

HAMPTON MYWnw’a Mm 

ShRiJSWrJll 


Bouses- fassaa-Scffi* 

HUNTINGTON 


HAUPP.-SD 6-Col Spbnch 

23*0170 

HAUPPAUGE-UnmiC hr rflH»lfl»5D 

HAUPPAUGE Point of Woo* SO 6Bim 
HI RjnchA BR M. -A/C Fm I DR, 
dm. Sri, gras. 547.90Q- 516-265-5636. 

HEMP.WEST S44.9W 

YOUNG COLONIAL 

ases 

garage, walk; to U.fcRf Aluw an- ; 

mfltfsmu^^^GarofMl « i 

wwr nas btaifr a nsterredi i 

BRESUN 516 /IV 9-3338 I 

333 HEMP TPKE WEST HEMP 

Hewlett HBR COLONIAL 

> SCUM 

516 / 569-5772 

TITCtdartnrsr Avt,Ctdarhurst 

HEWLETT HARBOR-DI5T 20 

5 bdne anfnm bit cent htll.coT.on.lft 
ten featuring lux dvnwHe *lte bwttd 
ourniHe pool In eowilnr duo setting. 

2 '/> bftra. new COTtg nwuoirt. magnil 
26 *den w/brK frtH A a’kltch. brth w/ 
hand carved wood beams A stucco 


SOUTH HUNTINGTON 

PERFECTIO N jus b een •eMwwf! T 
ACRE-3 Krais. FBnrm •/ 


HoBses-tesK-Mt* . 113 

BFGjHj- 

patio. SmSm SM-TO-gM 

JERICHO 1/3 ACRE 

BEAUTIFUL RANCK 


THE NEW. YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST/, 1975 - 

BMB8S-Nisun-Saffak U3 Hwc-lteSM-SBlWfc 113 j Hpcsw-Kassan-Saffait 113 j fcB^.tone-Seffafc 

MANHASSET 




leons-ttssk-SafMc - ml teses-KanB-SofM 113 j 


M * WWSSET 0U)WE5TflURY JERICHO LO. PORT WASHINGTON &SAMD5 POINT 

*ff£L,uj wHb «ts Wiwte rawSSFffiw OUREXCLUSIVE SHOWING EVHEHN 

3 U ^’ ,wwded LONG LOW RANCH - HAS STYLE! 


poot'wmwngton ASARnfoiNT 


Dili wHb deep JW; 
'eptled Jly rav. d*V 3 




at tent. wntMT. Wibcraan. 

WE HAVE MANY WATERFRONTS 

HEINEMANN 


R0H.YK- ' 

. ExduavE 

- SUMMER SJZZLK1 


nswa 

s*»: 


art d afrand> 
»» 
i oooi. .toms 
* rm, 5 tana. 


; “...n 



CAPE CQD STYLE 


- SPUT-lEVa STYLE ' 



SKALKY 


O'CONNELL 


Bushell & Clous 


JEHICHO-CdonW. _4 


mmm&wwQ 


agpfadomoM. Si& 
aaantMWt 

Our Exclusives 





Merrick Mat Fax Blvri 5WM-S573 
MEHUCK-GGU} COAST 

OPB<< HOUSE 

M21 Hewlett Awaits 


DEEP WATER FRONT 

True 4 BR Ranch, 2% Wtt, 2 hg den, 

dock. 5U% (sum mtge. MORE! Aim- 
jflintv u nderpriced. Print only. 516- 

MERR1CK. Otanwliy setting. In the 
woo*, draiflany reduced, owner anx- 
towTJ bffm*. Ifv rm. Ut, tend, gar 
S42r49fl« 

HOME CENTS 

17 Merrick a*. Merrick 516/377-1900 


516/621-7000 

■OLDWeSTBURY WHEATLEY 

OCCLUSIVE 

7 w yog Rnch fflR. fawm/bic, 
me petio. 'orar/rtr, on 2 nnmv 
acres wrtpartfmg pool. Orertv 
drive. Excellent. S143J0Q 

FLORENCE Agencyjnc. 

516/OR 6-3424 



COLONIAL STY1£ 




Many caws In all trio mots. 
Why rat gtve ia» all? 

EVHHTT1 


’ PRESENTS 
FACTS & FIGURE 
— SSmd COMPARE— 

B ri ght Ranch $59,900 

wwnwv. 

FowBedrooms $67,500 

gSSS^'tf^SffiSJiS 

Woodsey Setting $84,500 

nrSf n&&£Si 

BeoconHiil ~ -$89,900 

Brick S. stone wlft rider wMbL 3 
oecraono, rm room, beech & tans 

OPEN SUNDAY-10 Ait - 
FOR DETAILS CALL 

n/nnuni/r 



. OPEN HOI 

2BAYLESPU 
SUNDAY^AUGU 
NOON TO 5f 

custom Neto 
itliML atiB 
i fail rm* with so OR 
- tireDt/.flQhsmtw. 




■: KEY nun 


* .{5161 MA 1-0210 

TOC MritarD stud (Be2SAJ ' 


EAST HILLS 


GREAT BUY! 


RtLlbralle train vi iiagiV r . 

OWNffi pi, - 

SYOS3ETNCWTH 

HUGE RAN. . 

Roans ere big In ftisj 






xtra^^^Prlnc only. 516-29MM17 

Hewlen-mod Pome. Very, gd ennitr A 
cand.4 BR 2 bfli, fln bsmt, oorrti A pa- 
sta. lb pm. Lg tax. Nny xtras. Nr 


recreoton roam, Ideu ana. SH- 

374-ITO or 516074-3448 

HEWLETT Dbt 14 2 story V rms-4 BR2 
tm. Mutltlw blft-owoer. low Km. 

S5M0Q. Eves 5l6-i»4-61 57. 

Hewlett/S towns A vie. Ctac d tod ay 
WWrK^awST^^”" 16 * 
hicksvle- 6 mac rm L-shnoe rrt, w/3 
BR A atfper. Fin tel. .Lb beam KfefflO 


‘ $ 85^00 

carll s. burr 

’Gallery Of Homes’ 

516/761-6000 

7 O^^^Sul^LXcSlWTY 
HUNTINGTON SO «2: 

ove; 4 LUSH ACRES 
SCENIC LLOYD HARBOR 


$125,000 

carl! s. butt 

GALLERY OF HOMES 

MMMmm 

HUNTINGTON 50. 

SWIM YEAR ROUND 



Seats PotnMtanortWYtnOtflce J 

mfuirffier 77 Monorhaven Boulevard ; | 
516 - 944 - 8877 ' 

p.w.oracr (OOP. Ralfroad SU.J 

51 ' Main Street 516 - 944-9626 


BLAICH 



EiSiS^i 


asamwsm! 

tend, ell ewks. want to station. S6?.- 


eent j/lTbr, 3 ms. den. li 

KKMK 

HOLBROOK-Extt 61 LIE. TO WO 
col. den, plev rm, J riffia. 2 tu 
Wo 7n port pool. 2 car gar, V3 ( 
^ CT l^stonB^MiB Inch,. 9 

HUNTINGTON LLOYD 



Manhasset^ I ndeuondent Realtor . 
J1 Plandome Boad BWgB I 

weVE GOT IT. 


brs,T Ml bttr , 2 owri rm 
. doctor* former hom/of- 

a *ttM 


CLAIRE SOBEL MA 3-1 200 

T2 Merrick Ave at Mem* RRMa 
MERRICKSO-PRESTIGE AREA 
New Wfrfl Col or Hi Rnch 
The last section. Prigs! for sale. 4 

Bawaflu 83 tf- , -* / . 



PORT WASHINGTON 


PLAINVWS PRIZE BUYS Wotereiew 

Decorator showcase^* suit. e/a. 2 ’a 


$61300 


516-9449400 

PORT WASHI NGTON SANDS POINT 

C ROBERT MOORE 

Attndwr of Pert waddfigton R.E Jewel 

JUST LISTED 


uffl 


- (516) MA 1-0020 

UExnwy bet RaslwRdS Wilts Ain. 
ROSLYN EAST HILLS 

NORGATE RANCH 
SSlTISSto, wrto!Wk^§i<lS!‘tj 

A/C MUST SELLI S8&SU 

Adam -Estates' 


birch ti 

{516)433-8 

SYOSSET - 
. 1QRMCOLC 
4+Bedrms 

RRfftM 








r \.,* v V 7 -I' 




_ _ rm w. 
■Siting rra, a 
front & rear: 
full baths & 
rm. shKtr & 
verted to 'mother 
stonalt^e. WE HAi 


uen. phi oonii, nmu 

ywhouse. On NTs. Owner 514- 

mrsm . — 

DECORATOR'S HOME 



HunHngton Homes 

224 EJaldu, Tote. 5M/HA3-37Ba 

MUNTINGT0N.OIX HILLS 

SPECTACULAR! 

5 Bdrm Colon ial/Pool! 

li will be loved et Id glance! Tcdal^e- 




UDOBCH 

SHANG-R1-LA! 

3/4 ac. waterfront oruo new bulkhead A 
dock. Beaut 3 BR Hanoi, new kitch, 
cent air, anmklr svstm, man" 1 ' 
Indsod. (MU Ownr 51443M477 


NORTH STRATH-Ptcture book Col, 3 
SC 1 'h Mhk. E.I . tU rec rm, U» Tx 

SllfSOO 

MILLANG 

27 Plandome W 51^677-4343-4 

MANHASSET 

THISISMANHASSET* 



^FrrsPLii^PMTrT* . 

SONMY lerner 

3U S Oyster Bay Rd Exit 43 U Expwy 

(516) 938-8700 

Plsbnrffw Estate Area W-Aox 

■STATEY COLONIAL' ' 


AVON REALTORS 

Flainview OLDBETHPAGE 


MOVE RIGHT IN 



BEACB& MOORING 


EASY CARE CAPE 

Mita nt ptas g raert ue tor vo w 

CR COLONIAL 


IssoH 

ANDROFF 

i 516/621-8787 


COA( 


ROSLYNV1C 

EASTWHUSTON 




NATALIE PARKINSON 

Part aval ISA Mtnrt 516 /Ha 14173 1 

HUNTINGTON S.D. >6 S42.99Q 

, BELOW MARKET PRICE 

Sudden Change In Plans Often Astute 

n s- An ynusuel Oortv To Own This 
illy Brk Home, bav-wtndowed 
livnn. formal dlnrm, family rm. 3 BR's 
Hbbtm. ell on heavily freed Vj ac. 

SAMMIS 

433 Rte 2SA Nortbpf 514-757-4800 
HltNTI NGTON— Norttaorl :Musf Sell 
34 BRs Dutch Col, nestled In: 

TALL OAK TREE Setting 

Klt/tearing rm comte w/beameci all & 

a ll trot suitable as 1am rm, full OR. 

, wnl, ivj toils, many xtras siev. 
Seller committed to otlwrjrooerlY- 
immed Kcpv avail. S52.000 earner. 
15161757-2483 


Bushel! & Clous 

HUNTINGTON 

NORTH PORT VILLAGE 

HAPPINESS IS! 

LNltra In the vtiiioe In a charming 3 
BR Ranch on a gorgeous since of 
orooerty, Hioolness u cl a vino bMmlrv- 
lon In the yard, saving lo taxes 6 enlov- 
Ingeflnenelgnborhd 240,900 

SAMMIS 

433 R1e2SA Norfhof 516-757H0OO 
HUNTINGTON NORTH S69J00 

EXCLUSIVE 

COLONIAL 

_ FLOWER HILL SCHOOL 
Erthnive Agent for young executive 
lmnie.U» rm.dlnrm.Dlayrm,4lMnns, 
2 fi bttn.fpi end orlvecy. 

DAVID E. COLE JR., INC. 

51 6/271- MOD 147 E. Main St. 


LLOYD HARBOR LLOYD NECK 

ONAaEARDAY 



HOUSE & HOME ! 

75 PLANDOME RD. S14G4MB46 I 

MASSAPEOUA 516/790-2297 j 

PRESTIGE M/D.C/H COL , 

beautiful NASSAU SHORES Immaco- ' 
late 4 bdrms.2'/r «hs,2- ear oar.Scg 3 ; 
rm aotjrlcw to sell last MUM 

BILTMORE WTRFRNT COL 

house beeuNful.heotod pod.nlgMdi* 


NEW HYDE PARK 8. VIC 
LAKEVILLE ESTS $79,990 

Beautiful brick & fldstone Colonlil. 

nwAv 

MANHASSET HILLS $92,990 

John H. Mullins 

f^^ IDEAVE MLS^I^rl 


Sandsport 


625 PORT WASH BLVO PORT WASH 

PLA1NV1EW-8ETHPAGE 516-883-8757 



PORT WASHINGTON 

Starter House $45,000 

AND BRING THIS HOUSE TO ITS 
POTENTIAL PULL BASMT, GAR, 
LOW TAXES. 


ROBT. MOORE 

AT THE TOWN DOCK 
350 Mow St [516)883-9060 

PORT WASHINGTON 

SUCH A PRETTY TOWN! 

SeUboita dendna ouatot shoos, Rriday 
tdie bacd cnccmt 



JANE HAYES 

(516) 759-0400 

92 Forest Ave.Locutf Valiev 


tram and more *77.991 

GEORGEOUS BAYFT RNCH 


New Hyde Pk-Grt Neck Sdhls 

No. of Hillside Av. 3BR ceoe, cent e/e 
mod rat-in Ut. jmld OR 6 den, Fu) 
temf, gar, etc IMTSOP. St6-32W791 

NEW HYD PK-LAKEVL EST 

Gr NK sdd-Col In tx. 3 BR2btti, | t 
famrm. tin tram S79JB0. 5I6-357-V7B7 


OosetoBoy 


SI 10,000 


HUNTINGTON • 

This 0473&&3K. etll 
rails for gracious, elegant itvli 
nil family rm, 4 hides, 4 BR's d 
tail mooring. Byamxrintment. 


nis Classic Older Colonial nai ell me 
enraits for gracious, elegant living, 
legnlf family rm, 4 hides, 4 BR'S nrh 


HUNTINGTON SCHLD15T *3 

4%Wir-,f^>. , !U5!& 


SAMMIS 

5 1 6673.g 1HCTOW ° ff ^l 0P .m. l 
HUNTINGTON HQRTHPQRT 
HOW ABOUT A POND? , 

Bight In your bat*. yard! Sweet Con- 

ADELAIDE BYERS 

67 Main St,Norlhport 516/AN 1 -67M 


HUNTINGTOH-BAY HILLS 

asssa 

kfth. Iraoarted tl le llr*. Quality features 
ibroushout. Enjoy swimming, sailing, 
tennis in f amity batch community. 
mm By owner 514427-9267 
HUNTINGTON— West Hllli-AD. *13. 

on 1 wooded eav; 5 BR, 3 WlLKnta/c, 

slHjngdoop to g* & 3 patio*. 
heatgjjm^^^lamles. Owner 516- 



Gr Nk 5tW-Col In tx. 3 BR2bth, lg 
ternrm.nnbsrm579mil6-3&97B7 
NEW HYDE PK-Brt col: 7 lovely rmv 
tin trant, hi exist mtge; priced m 40s 
for fast sale. . _ 

JOSEPH XL MOLLALY 516 FL 441962 
NEW HYDE PK-Widelme res: formal 
*n rm, country kit, loe dormered 
bdnn*. tin bmt; owner anxious. 
JOSEPH M, MULLALY 516 FL 4-0962 
NEW HYDBPK-Htrrldc**-3 BRsHII w ft 
fa, den, fin tram. Too am. Reduced! 
SW.WO HERITAGE 5T4-74M50Si . 

NEW HYDE PARK. Brt split: I loe 
rms. 2’ft bttn, many extras. _ 

JOSEPH M.MUUAY 516 FL *41962 
OAKDALE-IDLEHOUR 


LYNDA BAKER 433-4110 

PLAINVIEW— Mionlf brick Split. 3 i 
huec BR. T't bit,, dm gar. All aoptno. 
JUS, beautiful. Sacrifice. *54.990. HO- ! 

BIN 15167 4334m 

Ptaimriew Soflt, *54,990, oversea nuty. 
den. bsiat, gar, ^CO. PAYS COMMIS- 
SION" 

FRAN SCHULTZ 516/622-3636 


549-S9W 715 E Mein, Hunt 367-3955 
HUNTINGTON NORTHPORT 

WATERFRONT 

Huntington to Hamptons, Chalets Con- 
temporaries, Htatwtcal & Villas 
For Details Call 

CIRCA. 516 757-7200 

M6Rtt25A,Nor1hpart 


MANHASSET MUN5EYPARK 

CREAM PUFF 


John H. Mullins 

^^movsfer 5 ^^ 
MASSAPEDUA-Unury Spilt Level 
Hwne,_Prof manicured grmmtis. Alum 




. Huge family rm 

TwlcwS'. C^fi 


BIG CHIEF LEWIS 

4B0S«rlseHwy 516-S4T-9600 
MASSAPEOUA SCHLDIST *23 

WATKRONT-4BDRMS 


tarns, 2'A Mbs, 2 car. wded ac 

YOUNGS i^D GARNER 

' ITT MalnSt C °^* 9 * 10 a C *5l6 e HA7-aQ77 
HUHT-ln wanted S. of Jericho Tpke, 

^^VSnW5i ? 4[ 

refcd^hr oulck sale of ML500, Exclu- 

g^^lCHO^ 40 ^ 5 


GALE 

516/692-677P Agcy 516/42T6600 
HUNTINGTON 

'BUILDER'S SAQ8RCE' 

rallinBlBnd d3S tor badcywXm^ 
nrent. Quiet deadend streel- 
BUILDER'S AGENT 5W423-UM 

HUNT BAY’S OWN CAMELOTI Exoul- 
ilte Eng Country House, 2 Wes. Junerb 



sunken LR, form DR, new Ut. 3BR, brk 
MtailumawalDolPg magnjt =H. acre. 

6 LEY 514/4234582 

Huntington Sdil Dist 3 

Sgwv. young fit colonial, 4 Fgbrs,7Vj 
bths. lam rm/fpl. move m cond. Lovely 
pvt '*> ic m prime area. Price reduced 
For mhdt sale. Owner J16- 


HUNT| NGTON EAST NORTHPORT 

Tronsf d Owner MUST SELL 

■i-«— — n- — — < barms, ige gourmet kikh. jvc kltdi 

HUNTN’PORT S139.000 DR.NELSON 

WATERFRNT GATSBY ss msoju s sm 

15 rm Col on T J ac 14T pvt sandy bdi. OM.HTlN GTQN-CIrci 1840. Howe J 

^ tIhgton,..., W480 S®SS W ” ,,5,I!MSB: 

Huirtnghi-Melvilie Cofonral 

SO 59 rra, cent air, tin bunt w/sauna. 
beaut lannscp,^ acre, unoeiwnd 
snklrs Owner anxious *04,000. AftaP J 
pm 51a 44T6254 

mT blfSam rm-'f^SlgJrl iw^car 


aHBP™™ 

WALKER 

100 PLANDOME RD 

516 MA 7-3100 

MANHASSET 

LOVELY GARDENS 

walk to itafton front this 
haottonw CcjSnlal. Large, 
living rm w/fpic. din rra. 
den end 3 bdrras. S73J0D 

OPEN HOUSE 
Sunday August 8, 1-3 PM 

4 bdrm 2*AWh Colonial A 


MASSAPEOUA TN THE SHORES' 

RAISB) RANCH $44,990 

CENT ER tW J4 j.Bgdim dtnr m, wal l 
mra^WgSJ^I wament, gwige. 

STELIA REALTY U 1-4800 

MASSAPEOUA 'BAYVJEW' 

•WATERFRONT 



FIRST SHOWING 


SET ON JUST UNDER hi ACRE. 
This roomy colonial soastS 

4 FAMILY BEDROOMS 4 2 OATHS 
PLUS MAID'S RM 6 BATH. FAMI- 
LY RM. ON MAIN FUt, FULL 
BASMT, 2-CAR GAR. 

Sandsport. 

(MEMBER P.W.R.E. BOARD! • 
162 SHORE ROAD PORT WASH 

516-883-7780 

PORTWASH1NGTON-SANDS POINT 
! 57 SECTION SOLD Ol/n 
2ND SECTION NOW OPEN! 

SOUNDS 

POINT 

ESTATES 

SOUNDV1EW DRIVE 

NEW HOMES 

from $61,490 

Colonials & Spbnches, 

4 bdrms, 2Hi baths, liv nn, 
din nn, ultra kitchen, den, 
2-car garage. Young area ■ 
516-944-9467 
SMITH REALTY 


Beamed ceiUngAran .. .* 
Colonial 4 beds} but* ....* 
Generan 2 family m twn . S 


HTO 1 AN 


185 MAIN ST. 516-767-3124 

Member Port Washington RE Board 
ROCKVILLE CENTRE 

OURS ALONE-1 st Showing 



480 JERICHO TPK 

mw 

Syraset tnaai 

“SPRAWUNG 
i™ AVON RE/ 

SYOSSET- WQOD8UR - 

CHARMING 0 ' 
Tmes$]^0_:. 


■r 


‘.‘■i'&fai'? V'7 

- :.j*i jftjf' 

v. ?- 

• --; f W 

'■.'-frird&jlr 

ur.y 
> +-w?6 If' 

: - i~ v /'?..■ 

A--H: 


ROSLYN UTS EXPAND RANCH 

Perfect mthr/dtr orlgfatn 


. %AC 

*ARAf 

ight-ln Bkc 






* . -* 

Si-. _u 

- 


CHARMING CaONlAL 

NORTH- Bridt/sfucco, 3 bdmas, Itvnn, 
term dtnrm. larce den, plavrm. 60X 
125. Key here. 6W00 

ROXBURY 536-3530 

ROCKVILLE CNTR-I Rm Rracti. 4 Bn. 
2'.T Otto, soectac den, Sr Uv/DIo 
comb, cent a/c, gar. bemrtlndsa)d,mld 
160*1 Pnnc aia-aHTM 

ROCKVILLE CENTRE 

DUTCHCaONIAL $60'S 

wide-line beauty, thru cent hall,’.', 
acre. LR n/u, DR, eJJdt^ndsf tor. 
3-4 Bfaj'4 otta 4 nn ant or profes- 
sional suite on 1 st flr.wik to elltrins- , 
pwfathm. Excellent ooral. 

CANTERBURY. $6ftS ; 

aSff'wffl^DRlaHn^ ktLfm °rm3 i 
BRS.7V4 trttB.2 cer^entaUlr. 

C/HALL COLONIAL $50's 


Brtrt shtogle. 1st Hr: LR. Dr> EMC, 3 
hr. VA bth- den.. Uc: 3 (2 HUGE) rm, 
lull Mh. tm bant, ovrszd gar. Lge heav 
freed lot. *66,500. Owner 516-404-4892 

ROSIYN-FLOWERHILL 

lmmic Spill Randi prim area 3 M. 2 
Mh, LR w/tpl, cent VC, saeeneopa- 
tia, panel den, eet in kit, low tans I tfr 
500 _ _ 


By Owner 1516) 627-1193 


mi i rua 

lctILJ- i amm 

3pMriousacswftii 
IHy taiw.C/Atei 
pvtbcn^aaiDAabl 
COVENTRY Heart 



SANDS POINT 

FIRST SHOWING 

Beautiful CAC 4 Bdrm, 3 Bth Colo- 
nial sc) on tnacre In this orwt/gl- 
dus communtty. Dramatic atmo- 
ralaillngs m the living room end 
dfnlng room, musual w bedraan 
ttrffcbeach rights end aBn^Hvriy 


400 Homes-:: 
STATE 

3W5Q.OystwBa» 
SYOSSET NORTH ' 

CW 

French doors, coni' 
toic. sunken MBR. 
beque,Miconv&to 
laxas, take over mk - 

HORAN Rf 

T 16 jadaonAve.i 
SYOSSET-BIRi . 
Cheerful, fmmsc, 
rod's rm, r/zbtti. fl 

“"~dsts. Walk! 

I deck. 
921-25: 


•’ 1 .v-* “-*?'$■ 

A 

■ - -i •? fA.-A: 

- •- ■-gsg-- 


OCEANSIDE-COLONIAL 

4 BRs. ZKMivIMIv A/C,.fuUy Land- 
gd^r^mwextrte.pwnra 

OCEANSIDE 4BRSPIANCH 



. .Snarlngtai Rd (beaanas Pt Wash 
l"_|Wi Blvd). Left oo Main St to Shore Rd. 

B 


MARTELL REALTY 

350 Sunrise Hwy. 678-2133 

ROCKVILLE CENTRE 

h ^EXaUSIVEUSnNG 

ofavna! 2 car. deal prtSrty. Lo taxes. 
“Excellent Value 3 . 559,900 

WILSON SCHOOL 

All brick 4 bdrm 3% bth Tudor, libriiV, 

NEW ON MARKET 


(516) 8834)227 

735 PORT WASHINGTON BLVD. 

SANDS POINT 


SYOSSET-Umnecul 
ilv rm w/tute. dir 
jhDP'o i tnmw. Lo 

CLAIRE SOBa 

12 Split Rock Rd 

■- VALLEY STREJ 
06,900-5 rm Rant 
On 60x100 cornrp 
haul Value. 

NEW dramatic 1 
nwthff/dautfrfer. 

SjD.lMrmMir 

in .llr; 2 tarns A 


'• i'*»s 




SANDS POINT HEINE 

SEA CUFF 2 FAMILYS valley streaa 








Dr Mo models. 

PORT WASHINGTON 


"’IsSSSSn'fcS 0 '* 

Souttt Strathnure, Manhassef 

MacCRWE 


• 516^27-4440 

BPUndoma Road, Manhasset 



On Sunday call (576)767-0518 

HYDE 

(516) 883-6300 

?T SMpil* Terrs-Bch rto 


BAR HARBOR-$52,990 

ENSIGN REALTY 516/795-2255 
4222 Merrtdc Rd- Manapaoua 






Btermann 

One Part AvelS16)MMhHiet 7-4U0 
From NYuieour2i2(nrnfclN 1-2604 

MANHASSET-Flower Hill 


Split, 3 BR. 2% MtB. EIK, LR/brk 
hcJc. Dg.Oen, Mass end Ha nrUm? 
Hre alarm, cafe orart w/tur. abet Tear 

s sAmar****"* 


PORT WASH 1NGTON-SANDS POINT 

Eriov the cooling wafer view raw & the 
wDodburnlng ffteglace this (ill. This 
brick & dapboard home otters much at 
'■ surprisingly low price. In addition to 
(he LR. form! dr 0 1 am rm. there are 3 
Bri T w /barratry ladng the vraterk & a 

iu^Nnisb bsmt. Lo, ia taxes & lust 

(Need a 4th HR? We have * .Salem ex- 
wndrd ranch with a possible Slti BR 
priced at UAJSOO). 


LOG CABIN i 

setting- 3 b*ms, svpernt Jn j 

-.$52,900 I 


RANCHY 

AhimTnum lltSng 3 bdrms low t^^wj 

MAKE OFFERS 
BIG PLOT 

90'^frant 0 bdnn cape considerable 
modernlzalion *63300 

NEARR.R. 


RVC REALTY 

1 1 S.Long Bch Rd 536-6100 

ROCKVILLE CENTRE NORTH 

BUY OF THE WEEK 




SEARJNGTOWN 

mns™« 

387,500. Prtn ndv, 51M6A 1-7093 

BBWSPM 

Stron^Ne3i E de!Kn»55S OT ivete 

Owner^fio ?^ 4iL5 r e ' Pr * DB s, ^ on - 


Just lined. Col, large Ilv rm/fgl. foml Owner <516)751-0652. 
■uiicnuR nrriiDaurv rm -P- 53y,9llO. jl6W»rJ i 


e Sets!. 2-car, 4 1 
ktc, mustoe 


MeHculeos Cofonlel 4 bdmu, sudws 
roora&portn *72400 1 


HYDE 


IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. C/H Cto- 
tn f BR randi. 2 or, ,1976 kftch, lge 
jWuuB^ftn tend, Wilson sdiL Kiy 

HARMS 766-4118 

ROCKVILLE CENTRE 

WILSON SCHOOL 

Tudor, brk, stn.il ate roof, 4BR, garden 

■ STATELY BRK COLONIAL 

aasBatrfr.?^** 


ifthr* Jrant «iumn?*,w 
nos, like a new mode) 


KATZ & LEE 516/536-8844 

322A SuraHo Hwv." RVC 


Massapaquo-Codiilac Split 
'/i bth 3BH SOZ3 brand new kit 2 zone 
rf air & ht newivtlec don sunken LR 




S5 \U° 



Uovd Harbor 
tiAm&.'H* HUNTINGTONGENTERPORT 

Unvfyaj 3 BP, ULWc, den. Beech l 


MASSAPEOUA NO-4 BR Cope 

LjBg'L^g R^ WW^Tj^r^ ^elwu 

W^WP^gU^COLOWALj^^TER- 

bascmtfflL >> VKant & aiixfiSo." 
Sunrise (5161541-56M. 
MASSAPEOUA-Cape, 3-4 BR. Ml bsmt, 
^giwua«Wp.M,k,tra^ J91 ^ 13 

MAgAPEflUAjSO 23. 3 BR Cepe,cntf, 
541-SI72. 





(516)883-6300 

Sun Call Mr*. MertUee 15161767-0510 
PT WASHINGTON A SANDS POINT 

HARDING for HOMES 

Rambling 

Country Home j 


Beautiful Stone/Shingle 
Long Ranch on 2 Acres . 

7 MASTER SUITE * 4 LGE BR'S' 


r> 

5CHgFLER REALTOR 4&|^M 


MANHASSET-FLOWER HILL 


211 Moin St 516-883-2244 

MEMBER P01|TWASHI NGTON RE 
PORT WASHINGTON SANK POINT 
^ILYROOMPL^Y^™ 5 
BATH iffiW 
FORTHE BEST IN HOMES SEE 



MYRA MARASH INSKY S16/764-3625 
ROCKVILLE CNTR 

ROCK CNTR-OW Canterbury 

Maet-amrani Inttfto-ciijfotn young, 4 
BRs, ZVbMIrs, lintiitlc dw Wriplc, su- 


el laiwseertnu. Owner tramfeared. Hg 

nferam* 

SMTTHTOWN MUST SELL 

5 BR eusfm Tudor mi ail.lit, sunken 
trant, bjHW prot’l. Uiaded w/extrn. 
S MlTTfT pWN -ttjjOO rebate an dorfrig- 

™^OTec.s>«^B. owner 

' 5MIT HTOWN 5. BR ranch irtne Eaoe- 
wgod A v yw.L acre Need. waftER, 
schools, shops, mid 516 265-2766 

^‘JHTOWN-3 BR ranch beavt IMaxL 

dRKBmsf 

Ljrtgws. bsmt. Eitd finaneg. Excentm 



WANTAGH C 

3BR.1 
sernd i 
ortncuor 











tan vwrame Sifr-766-974* 


Section- 10 


II I nil ■ in 



mmm 


WANTAGHArtt r- 
‘ Col, 3 1 * bths. 


HUNTINGTON • FREE BROCHURE 

•HOMES FOR LIVING’ 


•Mundnatm Bay Rttv 516/271-1766 



2RD-H6 acres. Cud 4 x 

1 , dn, R« rm, 2 DHn, 2 
ub bsmt, dn gar. a ■ 




Memck-SeofodGoW Coast 

Custom 6 tan Sgtandu 3 Bths, Bn 



Looking for 
more teaching 
opportunities 
to choose from? 

Look in The Week In 
Review (Section 4) 
every Sunday. 

Look in the "About 
Education" feature 
every Wednesday. 

Look in the Classified 
Peges every day of 
the week. 



reeulrwTLC ..si 

516/767-3870 

7 DAYS BETWEEN 9 AM &9 PM 

HARDING 

413 Mom St, Pt. W as h ing t o n . 

PORT WASHINGTON 

NEW LISTING 


4-1305 

ROCKVILLE (Je>re6-5UdRn 2Mh hi 

wwafS^fiBE sob6l roSSrSa 

RVC N. Haw mwn. .specia l, law QOS 
^MAN^fttoTirtRVC53fr5211 

RQNKONKOMA 7 rm costm ranch, 2 




-« Ls 







2 bdrms, IVj Mhs. Bcadi 

& twintt mm. SftOW 





MarfRATF 

Sriora3bdr2btht«mnn S67JD0 I'lOLvIlnlL 

Esl«tn31x3rTutka'llvrmW S7S.900 
UhNbdrSMtillvrm/Tpldai 5115^00 

FOUROAKS 

171 Main SI S1M44-65M 




























































































NSW YORK TIMES . SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1976 






IMss-SnseCa. 3! 


G05HEN-MI DDLETOWN VIC. 

f. UNBEATABLE! 

,FWl acre 6 iwcw sites 
. .VHii-UMmianvetHio 
.£cariMecntrv oarages 

3 Magnificent Models 
from $37,990 to $40,990 
ONLY 5% DOWN 


BERGEN CO. 


Iff YOUR 
EYE DO 


Rnsts-IInvTarfc State 



Hi! 



In the prime Mlnhlnk SdmH DMr. 

(914| 355-3090 

’ "wgsEkw 



7>i%-30 YEAR MORTGAGE 

V "WNBU" 

-5% DOWN MORTGAGES 

■OVERLOOK ESTATE 

3 BDRM RANCH $39,50 

4BedrmCdonlal $47,50 


randi turn. 2QD* front 


163 


Our 40 page full cofar 
brochure 

is yours for the asking. Profiles 
and pictures of 13 superb res* 

identkrf communities with out- 
standing schools and town fa* 
alrties-all JMrthm easy commut- 
ing distance of New Yorfc Oy 
and prod from $40,000 to 
over $300,000. Ladies Home 
Journal recently called this 
community "One of America's 
15 finest." A serene community 
with lower and fewer faxes. All 
types and styles of homes to 
suit aD lifestyles. Excellent 
transportation to every corner 
of the compass. Finest town 
sponsored and dub activities 
end recreational opportunrtfes. 
Outstanding medical facilities. 
All Houses of Worship. This 
booklet is a MUST if you are 
thinking of buying a home in 
the New York suburbs. And it's 

YOURS for the asking! CaH ar 

write today for your copy. No 
cost, of course. 


GALLERY OF HOMES 

160 E Ridgewood Ave. 
RIDGEWOOD ML5 REALTOR 

(201)652-7900 

(2)2) 594-3245 

OPEN TIL 9, OPEN SUNDAYS 



Bmais-ftw Jersey 


TENAH.YVK3 



FRANKLIN LAKE 


SHADOW LAKES ESTATE 
GORGEOUS POOL 
$149,000 

enormous formel I Hvlng room with fl re- 


ar 5Br; antra; ssuasa ws w/ww 
' fH; mtg isura n wlnubuy^^ 

Ben Alpem 
NY: 212-233-1 090 

Rea [tor H»nr 9 Manafepffl 20V534-2000 






RICHARD L 

SCHLOTT 





ALPINE ID Min GW Bridge 

TWO NEW COLONIALS Under *180,000 








fara-STEWAi 


SHORT HILLS 

. ENGLISH BEAUTY10 


TWtN WVERS38Rsc 




RAMBLING Bench J 1/lum adjoin 
Nehnl Pres*rve.3BRs 2btfti 
FamRm + Den Utter privacy Norwood 

CONTE MP Pndi Closer EHJBR2 bfh 
screen MTIo lush V* *C 182. SCO 

MASONRY C0L.Tr « shaded 'h acre 
aostcT.3BRi T -jbms,Dtn & 2 car o*r- 
.Watt Id everything 159,900 

COZY Brick ZBR w/Wcsoeened oorch 
& Room to Expand. Dess lot w/Fruti 
trees-Clotter . Sff.900 

Jo Myers 

20T-7M-7111 
ALPINE 


ALPINE VIC EASY COMMUTE 


Tenaflv E-H.-dealc 3BR IViWt) rant 
A/C Col, Slate roofea screen parch. Ttw 
Maugham 5dil area 585.000 

OemaresMBR historic Dutch CoL3W 
FammcProt zoned ,3/4+iae . .577X00 

CressJcm-Tw com) 3BR Cert A/C Srill/ 
L Den,Offlce 2 car SM.000 

Dememt-Yourej Custom 4BR TMAath 
Central A/C CotS W'sAoaimttykltl 
acrtMany anwuths 5115400 

BOGERT REAL ESTATE 

REALTORS 201-768-8505 

602 Plenraml Rtf Demurest 



MATAWAN 

JU5T REDUCE) $2,900 

Mint! Mint! Move m conflttan. Super 
Bi Level. 4 BRs. 2Vr tuns, 2 car per; 
cent iir. cut (St sec Walk to schts & 

NYC bus. Now Asking 557,000 

CENTURY 21 

VANS AGENCY Monldafr&l’BPerMpdeWr 
Strathmore Prrf BMg, Rt 34, Mtfewan OPEN HOUSE 

OPEN 7 DAYS 201-566-1881 

210 Lorraine Ave» USD. Mwifclair 

Very spacious pire-rucm Colo- 
' nlaL Cornenert lac a ti a r . Va- 
cant. SCO'S. 

DO YOU WANT. 

A family room cot to tout 
fcl hl et: plus a den, srC powder 
room ranrtv? Pour becrocms 
and two baths ios»irs? We're 
waiting with the key! Quick 
possession. Asking lew 563*5. 





PRINCETON & AREA ALLS. 

PEYTON REAL STATE 

REALTOR 609-921-1550 



WARWICK VILLAGE 


HILL TOP 


- 50 MINS TO GW BRIDGE 
MJNU7E5TO GREB4WOOD 
t’^AKE, STRUNG FOREST 
' AND LOCAL SKI AREAS 


SPLIT LEVEL 

LANDSCAPED LOTS 


5% DOWN-30 YR- 
i: 'lWo MORTGAGE 

TO QUALIFIED BUYERS 

LOWTAXES 
NO.CLOSING COSTS 

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 






RIDGEWOOD & VICINITY 

STTHENS’ SiZZLERS 





BERGEN CO. NEW MILFORD 

7% ASSUMABLE MORTGAGE 
TO QUALIFIED BUYER 

BnaUMBM 

Ml measure of enjoyable living 
throudhom this home 

THOMAS I. 

BUSTARD 

R£A ^°^tvM..Te M fM W166 


BERGEN CO.-F HO-HO-KUS 

BRAND NEW COLONIAL 

An enormous sandstone front home 


WARW1CK-OWNER TRANSFD w „ 

4BRs. VA bafh B nfE I Maid's r no m or den a nd full 

Easy commute. Ask S4MML 914- | itttchcn. a pe ik oo ms ano 2 ba 
1 dKbno matter wftti cathaki 
anl2 fargo walk In closets. 1139. 

Bill & Morion HIGGINS 

REALTOR 5 HILLSDALE 

( 2011464-2900 






VERNON VA1 

2 acres +bflrn. 4 
Excel cona. Sd art 
an -7 











































































*mm :6n —fat 


zniBaKBs-cwncfaT 


irstan. 1 St iaoi'iiiaSSS" “ 


Wm 


REALTY 

(203>3S*TOf 



THE NEW YOR K T IMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7. 1976 

' 171 I Bwra-flaiiHcfat inf ' *" 


STAMFORD MLS REALTOR 

AN OPEN LETTER 

To The Lorqer Family 
Our Mon 

Hcwrwoutd you like 5 double BRl 
“ v huge bHis & more living area 
toaii yav're am mi a loos, tons 
time? Here's a brick Ironed em. 
tern beivtv-a No, ilamlard as & 
jbiuroowgod deck lovtewn all— 

Study, Id eoHo Kjt* I lumbo rum- 
dw rm. It all e& W to 500 sa.11. 
« noon pmn. Like new because it 
k »••.. rls custom customer be- 
came a transtwee l rtwr moved 

Sincerely, 




Hobby rooms, 2 acres. 

WIDE VARIETY OF LISTINGS 
MULTIPLE, OPEN# ONE-OF-A-KIND 



- TRADE 

Mi!?* Call collect to 


STAMFORD 


WIMBLEDON 
NO 

WESTOVER YES 

Georgeous all-weather tennis 

over Sn listings I court in prim^ executive area 
on over one acre-7 minutes 
from the RR station. Also in- 
cluded, beautifully maintained 
4 B8 Colonial. Served to you 
for $135,500. 


REAL ESTATE 

Wilton Center 203-762-8666 


WILTON 

‘Modem & Private’ 

Tu&ed away on a private nxd- 
il t«* 3 bedrooms, JbiittKS kaffi 
of dUss- SO n dec* & pond ulus 
brook SS7JCQ 

'UNUSUAL Birr 

5 bedr m rr u 3 balks, 2 fireplaces 

Kuffiife ,ra ’8® 

■ ‘Alone Together’ 
Rambling Ranch has a separate L 
comolete 3 bednn In-la* whe 
w/livrmLUfen * regular «$ 
jUTWtD A taWn Uttn e y flngln 

BABRAZOASSOC 

E5IWS7 Wiimn Ctmtr 203 762 8311 


Nassa-SHffoft 


MERCER CO. WASHINGTON 7WN5HP 

lOACHSw/LGCONTEMP 



l 3 g 3 




R^xiEjtak 



mimxm 


CENTER MORICHE5 — tli acres-Best 
Ik on BV-MS5 t Moniauk h wav_ue 


PotHBiCOu 



Botches Cl 


225 [(*«!*»» 


CekdbhCe. 



0raag»Co. 


Beaut preserved, truly rare a bdrm 3 
Mti arriloue w/hant l corral, 2 lovely 


I GREENWICH 

THE ULTIMATE 

in Townhouse living is yours at Geotrr- 
•town riwWi. pesiored o tter Kinw 
sive WMhingfen J.C. namesake, time 
rkk Federalist homes set m a quiet 

WRY-Smla CandlawMd Lake p K &’ ^"mSbUnS 

BY OWNER 

sted w ft BYTSfltdiJ Qrm. raised deto*. * ni#SF builder are ouiQJy 
* acre, excel sdtts, nice neigh- d scernlbla. wlffs spacious roam, tire- 
i. 1 to 20 isfn NYC. Many P to . country kitchens, attached 00 - 



WRY-5 mlB Candlawood Lake 

BY OWNER 


Ac. UUStL Ptlnc only. 


mm 


fr 'a*-' 
• ...4 . 

SOODWIVESBVER 


BY the lovely views 0* tin 
. id the many water birds. Si 
— : * a beautiful .area at It* 



SSOCIATES 

(2031655-1423 

OPEN SUNDAY 


2 E 5 E 5 


MT 


rjaes, bm s o man y mare extras as 
stanAmi Georgatown Nvth presents a 
con*iMl,on ot exciting value ana vn- 
tlglous location. fte loemftouses 
wen 7 daw a week tor convenlentvlcwL 

W*** **™"« In the Svf 

SlOCTs 

(203)869-4668 


GREENWICH 

• Interested in Greenwich? 

Write or call os tor prices and all 
For full parttailarj please coll 


-r v '.REALTOR 
GALLERY OF HOMES - 

200 RtUmad av. Greenwiai Conn. 

■... .2038696162 . 


GREENWICH - OPEN SUNDAYS 

NEW COLONIAL IN 
OLD GREENWICH 

on 1 At Ent-Hall. Uv Rm w/ 

W. Din_ Rm- Eat-in «il. F4m 
- R« w/tol. Deck. 4-5 Bedims. 

- Th Bite. 2-Car gar. Central 
. Air-cord. StWJOO. 

Egerton&Caird 

REALTORS 

(203)637-1726 

17* Sound Beach AW, Old Greenwich 




RIDGEFIELD MULTI UST 

COUNTRY FARMHOUSE 
$92,000 

Newly listed, charming New England 
vintage home on beaut Sed aerwoe »/ 
tiHty eopd sep studio Wdg. Comm ml 
(INK rm, ideal for ohotovsober, vtot 
or goes ante. Great enuntrv home. 

NEUMANN REALTORS 
203438-0455 


RIDGEFIELD MLS REALTOR 

RELOCATING SPEOAUSTS 

Call/write tor f REE home listing 
We are open weekends to discuss your 
non* needs & oiler a cwmleie list ol 
fwnes-you- price range-ne** resale. 
Srm Soil), value ol us ... 153.900 

SrmCol-minlCStidihcn . S88.9TO 

Krm Col. spectacular SIC. 900 

BETTER HOMES 

387 Main II 203438-Mil 


RIDGEFIELD 

NEWLY CONVERTED BARN 

L'nioue 4S9. v ,B home. BeauUkil set- 
Uro. ideal commuter location. sl<9,- 

PUBUCGPEN HOUSE 


WASHINGTON 

18TH CENTURY COLONIAL 

6 acres crmpltmirt this eetWhltul 1790 
ColenloTarag rms, 4 odnns, 4 tplcaa. 
vary good condttlon.nQS J00 

THE DEVOE REALTY 

7 Kent Rd New MlKnrd 203 554 5571 




AMELIA ISL PLANTATION 

Twnhie-Year round reseri. 3 Bft. 3’> 
Mtia, LR, DR, pallo Inorvj IclttJL Pnri 
turn’d, all sort tacllltles. S89JD0. (203) 


Comectknt 


Usbrea 



aug. 7 S a- loam is 4071. 

CALL COLLECT FOR DIRECTIONS 
call or Write for FREE 
listing brochure 

PEATT REALTY 


dFarmlnpville pa. 



S*«Cdl 


TWO ON THE WA7B? 

Nestled in the bend ot the river. Watch 
the water laoping al the shore from 
your liv rm or from the oversized polio 
al the enttys edge. Fish & canoe In 
your own back yard. An Idyllic hidea- 
way In tM toart ot Westport. SI 10400. 



Rartals-CottJectiort 


COUNTRY CHARAlf R- 
O/ERLOQRING 
YACHrBASrN.._S177.000 





COUNTRY AIT W/FPL-.Sl 

CARMEN'S 
(203) 226-4253 



WESTON-# room Salt Bax ♦ Income 
jf£^RA^lYR.E . 2n3-327-^9 M ° 


" i tr . 4 U^ a 


flfii mv 
rmj4 acres ot total 


COOKE 

Ed 1899 4 w. Putnam 

(203)8699263 


msisavfflir 



STAMFORD NO- 
CONTEMPORARY 

CLAY TENNIS COURT 

INGROUND HEATED POOL 

AY tenrti court, 
pool, tall pines and 


STAMFORD, NORTH 

PARADISE 

Big. trees can bo" topadjn U 
sefl^wbmthtsfcfraitf 
ramUTno Ranch a located. Com oft in a 
8 then retire to the com- 


. NEW MILFORD 

COLONIAL & 
CONTEMPORARY 
TREASURES 

True AreWtaeWedmecf Clage an 1 
aOY.woeded dies. QaBmOttn your 


WESTPORT-WESTON MLS REALTORS 

CHARM OF 1776 
Lovely historic Color iol over 
200 yeors old. High ceilings & 
fireplaces. 2 playhouses, fire 
dorm system. Family rm, den, 
office w/ separate entrance. A 
bedrooms, 3!6 baths. Separate 

3 rm guest apt. Unique proper- 
ty, lovely plantings. Burr Farms 
& Coleytown schls. .$145,000 

• NEW ENGLAND STONE 
Custom cut for gracious En- 
glish country home w/panoro- 
mic view for miles. Random 
width floors, bow windows & 
fireplace. Spacious liv rm. pnld 

den. Lovely master bdmi wing, 

4 other bedrooms, 4)4 tile bths. 
Sturdy bam w/stail, gazebo, 
& mature plantings. 

$$245,000 

(203)2279511 

JO SHERMAN 

299 Rivanlda Av Westport Conn. 







ni.imjff.rnt 


LEWISBORO No Westdiesttf 

2 soeaai ptren bordering on comerva- 
non area, 13 acres-^USJMO. 17 acres-* 



Massachusetts 



SE 3 Z 33 S 



Delaware Co. 





New Tort State 





North Miomi 15 min fr Bch 

2 bdrm house, Nr all Convemcncas. 
S33JD0 71*421-1507 


Lots & Acreage -ColuaUa Co. 




ORLANDO Area 80x100 Iol in develooMl 
community, gull , Iannis L more. Call 
212-945-5768. 






spedncanwL.ssUDO, excel flnanc- 
■8. Call colled: 

IHfflNION 

(203)3554)977 





3*. OEEN WEEKENDS 

iTANDINGVALUE 


HEWTOWN- 

PWVACY WITH PROXIMITY 

3 BRs.' life Whs, r/randi, IVY wooded 
mv. to rw rm w/txc, new w/w art 
LR& DR. 2 c/ettd owTHd grcSwst; 3 

fe: 559 ^ 

*44.7X71 ■■ 


,Ho 2 

bay. 
W, 4 bail 4 1am 



nscctWy & soecW tana tmehores. 

HARRY BB# 4 tTT& ASSOC. 

W82BHtRflo203-JB-l48421MBHOB8 



RIOGff IELD ' • - . . REALTORS 

.LoveltAif 






Lots & Acrease-Sechbad Go. 42S 


ur’i-'ii.'ii', 


TTI3 


Latsfitoesgs-QsterCa. - 437 





through want ads 




dai 








SADDLE HRL 

MAGMIHttNTS Bin MkSw sites 
hob: or ounf m mstj ex- 


3 SSSSS 


Other SecSoes 




..NEW YORK 
Ti 

for all your 
want ad needs 



MORRIS COUNTY 

COUNTRY VILLA! 



121 


taUs-OtterSeetms 


Colif-Hdlywd His View| 

4 BR, HiUoar patib, hardMod firs, 
talc Mnuily furnWwfl: oaf far large 
wqlty. many extras 1 . SI mi ma 213- 
550-7425, it ng arawer 213-276-1759 ask 
for Mr Pietro 




VIRGINIA CATTLE FARM 

YANKEE COME 

112AC H0ME $89,500 iLateftAereige-lrw 

hMltn problems Toremg mesa folks It 
xll before getting Into winter fcedfnp. 




3 barns A 4 dreams, 1? 


PELHAM BAY 100*95 LOT 

Exd residential area. Suit condo, ant 


Box 1*7, Chester 


?I5»21 r CORNER im courtrv-itte set 
th«. All ulllitles within walking 
lance to business and churches Can 
also be 2 building lots inr mother/ 
daughter M miles horn N.Y.C. 

91^ PflUTH,SBUYUP ^«l 


t.'oni'd on Following Page 























































































• •v s r’?t 




THE NEW YORK TIMES, SATURDAY, AVGUST 


Uts&hwate4b«JBM} 463 

Cart'd From Preceding Pay 


Lob & fereage-Verawd 483 


ffWlHUtTMHSB 

tnn: 


ATLANTIC CITY VIC 
; CASINO SPECULATION 



BKMGS&HUnVfBES 
Brwidy 887 

VIM 


BBBJBSS i F8CT0BB 
Nna-SriM 


7 , 1976 

Stvct-BraUiQ 


Access ramp ofl Atlantic Otv 
» nils probifiteiwlirl arn. 
201-07-411? . 





atedsSOOmo 

HAHVESOftl 


BERGEN CO-North-20+ Acres 

BuaowMpnH 


HUNTERDON CQUWTY-1 or 6 loft, lte 
aens each, road frontage, nor Srroce 

e lOON COUNTY MOanon 

. KINNEU^S^KERISE 


man wj jw 

Hepry C. Cutler & Co., Realtor 

m fioadan An. Kinntion, NJ. 

: (201)838-6200 

J5MKHE5TER TNP: 4S.7 ACRE5 twr 
Creskmd Village. Active grawfno 
ana. malar dovrioame rts. Ac ross tram 

2C^7B^^fflffevaS201^i^! 

MENDHAM TWPi pMurasque 5*. 


seyaaasar* 

CHAMBERS 5T.K. aA/i 77 Reads St. 

. Lrg 4,000’, 2nd fir 



IHpi i— iU Maiilana» - Ipw-fwiiti Wro-fafa 

• ; 1511 8» t Two boro 




PORT AUTHORTTY 

ms§r* 




SOUTHHIN VERMONT 


0573? _ 

bfe&faiagE-OfarSeds. 491 

ARIZONA SUNSTES - 




SISK IgxSUUR 

m on dwoBwigti. gocu odpw_ uiii 
rfftrd, 20 £561-5677. 


BAHAMAS-FREPOKT 


BUSINESS 
* INDUSTRIAL 
PROPERTIES j 
•* «0M3« - 


45m. u an 

Mi 

n ■ n 




tfEfcS EM 
jgfti 

taaarjfi 

Bona 


HIUj BOBOi 
qnuwd & rt 


I Lo l*witerwflv, Derby 5 w 

oiwafwll^5cr1fta. CaUHB 


New Yak State - 861 

SPRING VALLEY OWNER' 

1MHE TO NYS THRUWAY 

! 70M-JlW fkTOirf warehouse w to. 


Stere-latattafi 1161 
3D AVENUE • 

On West Side of Ave: 
Between 37th & 38th St. 
1,000 TO 10,000 SQ.FT. 
MURRAY HILL MEWS 
977-3377 



HocMKoMTHk-K 

mm 


usr ' ■ VHrCwiift 

PARKER. GRAMEf 

, 7WBTUIHST 
NO FEE 


> • '■ 

_ _ 

A-^r 3 * 
.. V/: ■ 


• / ■ was**'- 

> .-Tsa 


leasesmBernian mtv&frTOT : ■ 


FULL2a£DBAL2Bfe+ DR. 

' Central A/C & Gas Iqc 

FARMANCQ..92M«3 flrl 




STSNWAY ST, 25-47 

m n ftSjUdiUa store tar rent 


■ unsnsD w larany) kofm 

Whitehall «t* Fwtfi StuSo & 2 rm* 


14 5T 3H E-Hewv tamtn, I 


sep tti kWh tr 1140 nH.wl 
i hr security con* lot. 


Shm-RBss-SnfUk 1113 

GREAT HECK WlMt O. I« 


OffiCBs-Vtatatashr 


KOKH 

Owner's ofc SM 487- WI 


1211 $ 
— r - . tRt 


MT VERNON 50tpq Ft Odl 

sublet or mt lease, new orwriitte 

firs, RS«*ot SKE*** 

dm ma. ufc tad ntc Sc aim, retac 


14THSTE 

SiE RADER NO FEE 

tt$207&bff3td 


mTOmI 


SHOPS CTR 

tof.vcryreasL 


Tovmnouses. m 

iMd. Call 2)1- 

mn. 


Uts k tamgB-Pe MSj h mw 4€3 

BENTON-20 WDED ACRES 


PUERTO RICO-5 ACS 

itaanffiBsaas 

» JS acre multiple family uw Ms 


WmKStFflCTBHES 
■■fcnttw 

3rd STREET EAST 


e w all In 
sq n sraresf 


Stores-VesbkArCo. 1117 


vine, Az. 85S3S 




Exort ladCawttaii ReHBta telrrvg : : 

Rrtert W. Mwml3U<i fife 
cotouru. (Mario. Canada or call V416- 


122 ST EAST AT LEX 

1-5 stories rail. Md-Tipoaw ft. Slor- 
antcrantbugL JStaii 



SPRING 5t vtc-7 sty S/$ eltv. *mUr. 
vaentf. ideal en*» or AIR. Low cash. 
Call *24-4720 


Real Estate Smites 69S 
EASTERN ASSOCIATES 

Professional horn* & Mdn hweefion. 

RESIDENTIAL 
Commercial industrial etc 
ETC 


SUFFOLK 51, 161 

FOR SALE 


863 

NORTH EAST BRONX 



OZONE PIC..11 ,300 SQ FT 


HassK-SaMk 81 


^aaCTvatftrJoc - . .. 

Qffices-lfaiJagy. 12B j 

ISSSSSSis^ _ \ 

NEWBRUNSWraC-PROF 
10 LGE RMS-RENT 

umnncc2snWBtfteniaJP-54S4Bg 

PATERSON-RT20 

6 no office aufla, 1,725 .suit, l.atary 
Som. 

Offias-CgnicStet 1271 


I- CENTRALTAIKSOUTH 

: Wi ftr.TTwonff View, 2 Wj rim, 

[ BBJtehUt 1 ****•**» 

I . . -LEX&Z?5tSr 

HGTEGRAMSOPARK 

trawteit; rinatas from stt 5TUDHJ5 


.. 16ST,54WE 

2 ROOMS:... 


Otfot Town 0X1 *0M2h5T30 

KISS 


A405r.M«n%»d2^a 

s?R3U717 Mwr1,v- 0,0 


mnfl.bn-i 

amornsLl 



door, ironed Owner 51 6-64235) 

DEER PARK-5000 sq ft 
jjllmflyY^eri. V !&t r x 

rent Owrw 212-886-5822 


Omrehensfve nrHten Irepectfor re- 
nortsawerino all malar HtfB can- 




Pocono Country Place 

MTPOCONO BUJG LOT 75*185 


Culde Sac ^RecnaHon area 

MSMBaSSB 

POCONOS 

.MasthaeRanWi te.Coreiramlh 


APARTSflCNT 

HOUSES 



M'*atw , wa« 

Owner. CT4I7&1463 

tmnt at 1st Hr or 75x125 lot. Appri» gST 


NORTHVALE 

18,600 SQ FT 

NEW BLDG-LESSTHAN 

$1.45 PER SOFT 


'iT : - L ' ~ Twiji 


C n Bwd fc rt 


Bufrfliaa 

MADISON AVE (EAST 67 5T) . 

HANDSOME 2ND FLOOR 
STORE 

ggj,,— .fan JWi.ir. 

Upper East Side-For Lease 
Besu* old hora sti bin . ideal retail. 

I atxrwrm, rest 2T2-532-4CJ 

WVILLABINGTON SQUARE 


■ tiralevmaii.exri»acgrity.M 

Une.fdw&HiaRaME 

5THAVEW* 

. SHOW PLACE 


i AtfJ-PtnthsF 
studio tor cor- 


zraE/Easnaverortve 

WATERSID 

I^KS- 


EXECOFRCB FOR LEASE 



CROWN HEIGHTS 


5T6-367-53C3 

aaa 

HAUPPAUGE 



rtPffkw 1234 

iT-Offlee to share w/MD. 

<iavsaM£k.smL' 


VS Kre-WOO 
iilna etc. Ews 4U 


Pocofios-Gtenoak Forest 


HadoHai 761 

49STW-NR 10THAVE 




Haded 893 

me. MU >6400 

TaxpaimaodSSes 902 


aares-Sienfah 

JOHNSON Ave store 

suitable ailjlrws, 2 

supgmartwi. dc. *2 

Stans-BrooHyo 



5ov (10e39}fom SI 00-5275 

Tri 5 tec Sv: IMteSOQl SgUSS? 

34 STREET 225 WEST 
PENN BLDG 

: 

REASONABLE 

CbvtasF.NomCo., ICC. 422-7000 
Mr. Videos 



87ST.55EAST 

BETWEEN PARKtKADtSOCI 


2s s room surra 
5EE5UPTORCALL 


355T 153 East PENTHOUSE 
31/2 rms. LarceTn**. 
ReasmaMe. £g-tta& 

42nd STREET, 55 WEST 

APP 81 to 2500 SO. FT. 

■ MILLS & CO .730-7323 




POCONOS-16ACRE 

BoshMIl Falls area. Sacrlflee. Call 201 


•ALWBANVl 

MWIWMr 

opmwtoim... 


VA CA TION— LEISURE HOMES 


MRS.PEARL 796-2600 

BROOKLYN - ‘ 



42nd ST, 60 EAST 
Sublet office HtxS. SI ft. wfrfcw ml 




ww^^^nrr emr ofl enrnar. iU5| 


Rassai-Soffai: 


AMAGAN5ETT VLGE-Fme old year 
round home. 5 Ur's. 2 bttts, dtnrm, 2 
trpJcs, Suce attic. O/H (uni w/exas>- 
llom on Va acres 570,000 


EDWARD POSPISIL 


SALES & RENTALS „ 
AIAAGAN5ETT (5161 267-3030 


Amagansett-Barnes Landing 

1 Wooded acres. Coalenv. watervu. 
Ilv rm/M. 3 BR 2 blh. 3 decks, all 
amines, mtse rail SBSJXXL 516- 
267-8581 


WILLIAMSPORT AREA 


*716x16 cabin, 
is, or state game 


AMAGANSETT Dunes Architect's con- 
tern?, pool, 3 br\ 2 bttts on % aae- 


; WINONA FALLS-1/2 Acre 


WOODS LANE EAST 
BRl DGEH AMPTON*! 
i wi 1 acre w/bov vlei 


2 bins on % aae- 
516-267-3332 
StriKInD Cunterm 
wi & short walk to 



Hassan-SOfMfc 


513 Hew Tflrii State 


Cnmertknt 


WE5THAMPTON-OUOGUE 


acres- S39, 000 



BELLRINGER 


CA'RKIUSLivingston Manor 

2 hra N VC. 2 BR ranriion SVl acres, ful- 
ly tore & egutaped. hontto g an aroo er- 
tv. taxes 52«f w. Ownar transferred. 
S32J0Q 516-781-868? 


GUILFORD WATERFRONT, Sachem's 
Head, 165' waterfront. 9 nts. 2'i bibs, 
tolce, dock on deco wrier harbor. Ovtr- 
lookmg L.l. Sound. Prestige location re 
vkW dub. Excel cone. Fine summer 
'living, si 15.000 

CARMEN REAL ESTATE 

700 Main SI. Branford 33-481-0700 
HIGHLAND LAKE- All year round 
house, 2 hours^rc^ZMrms, Me, 


42 ST, 30 EAST 

c2? dSfSJS? * ,L WB1 5 * tri}1 ' x - 

MCT 236 EAST 

5CO-1 JYXT- )_S0G 

Colonial brick bloa. aflmad Interior, 
neen 2 a bn. suwease 733-7*74 


MASSAPEQU A-MEI&fCK RD 
NOB«GB^CORBRKBLDG 

with stare. excel tar orpn wePyt mtge 


SO STREET, Furi^rtbed effia space and 
services evaiiasfe for Met: amt scru- 
«M ir semi-orsfe55i3nal aria at 
ffrctorteiler Center. U12) 421-3232 or 
757- raw. 


57 AR REALTY 

201-854-2474 EVES 201-945-1627 


mO-Dwn tr amtoos. No (eg.734-6804 

5TH AVE EAST SUBLETS 

UN USUAL l£ASE5—S6aM30Q0/MO 

PAT PALMER 

22E67 TEX2M 

8th &. vkx; Wavieriy Pkics 
Magnificent I decorator hemMatf wts to 

nS^JB^RjSM ..JSSS. 

H^B^^KDWWMS ..TO 

hMt. M feasr dognmL Attended ^- 

Wolmuml Year Lean 
Agent on nranftes dotly & Sunday 

260-6960 

HILARY GARDEN 
300 MERCER ST. 

J.I. SOPHS & CO., INC* 

30TH ST (PARK-LEX) 

TOWNHOUSE 2 BEDRCX3MS 

SwWi; ovtrtnoksbeiumid 
garden; gourmet Uldien; 5900 . 

D. Buttons, Inc 751-9790 

3? ST, ISO E Bctvn Third & Lex AVs 

WALK TO WORK 

ONLVAfEWlEFT 

1 BEDRM $450 

Also Studio Apt, $339 

DRYDEN EAST 67MMO 



P E ^ E STRiAN (EynUN 


20'S EAST NEW BLDG 

heathkj 

216 EAST 29iS 
STUDIO W/SEPALC- 
1 BDRMAPT) 

. FREE AIR CONDO ' 

r&mm ' 

2«TsE- 24brU ' 

magnifT^TJdR : 1? • 

Central A/C & Gas j 

. wnaagg 

. 2<rswsT,am' 

Lg«ntoglJbwp«aod 


9-5121 -- 

art E- No F 

IDEALl.a 


m ?**: 

fwuaa- 


21 Sr r 210J 


PORTLAND- Small yr-rno iktmt home, 
stone ml w/Mo liter. PnM LR, stone 
term, trk patio on waterfront. Range. 


rang/ freer. .dr apes, linmac cond. Ra-t 
dv to move-in Ownr Lo sm 2(0 342 f 
2147 


55S7{btwn38D&LEX} < 

7200 SO FT-STR£ET FLOOR 
Rentssso WiItDWice ImroOmj ! 
ESI MR. BLANK: 6774455 


NO BERGEN-2 ProFiSurhs 

Fenner Cedar's. Car. main thorotara, 
n am e d occav. 7Dl-ffiV«347-8l37 

OCEANSIDE, U. 


S ST (200 WI 1 or 2 rams, in air-card 
> office. No se rvices. Private (avalo- 
n. Reasauhte. 246-2460. 



.21 St. W. Fine mod studi 

ttSF-sOM , 

EV23iSUS8i 

1B3PM 

zkdu.rmr 

A 


50*SE 

SUE RADER 


MOVE RIGHT IN. 

371-4460 


COLTON Northern NY 


SAYVILLE ON BAY 


ocean.3BR.2bm,caihcdi'ui-R.stu- ^ , _ 

dv, ice country ut, excellent com & a 12 nm i efflcleiicv by dafweek-nwidh-sea- 
Ernfhuyat S98JXI0 IsonPwl.rerij^msacaM.toFaines 

AL1ANM. SCHNEIDER . 


WESTHAMPnw-Quame-RmseftwrB 
Doconaar turn 6 BR Estate. Low taxes. 
Terms. Asking 5189,900. 


For Sale by Owner: 
or Can*>— Secluded 


REALTY CENTER 
195 Mill Rd-Whmpta 
516-288-1450 


Mad Summer Home or Canm—Setluaed 
woods 200' waterfront— Racket River — 
indoor toiler, Running VVjtrr, FTankiln 
Fireplace, Electric Heat, 3,b*na, Com- 
pletely Ftm—40 HP 14 Ft Boat a Mo- 
tor, Water Skis, TV, Many otras. MJL- 
000- Walter a. Nldungn. Box 2«. Pot- 
sdam, New Yort 13676 phone: 315- 
7^7720 


Htessadnsetts 577 

3 br housdag ooftages, full kit. to), in 
tenms. activmes nr 617-5489500 


89 ST, 316 EAST 


basement office scare jc_ recovated 
blco. 240 soft. sisO&1937 


BERKSHIRES NEAR LAKE 


BROADWAY, 1123 AND 1133 135th SI J 
IN THE HEART OF THE TOYS 
GIFTS HOUSEWARES AREA 
- Small/Larce officer ASmwrocms 
ReasoaaiHe rents, immefialeacc. 
KEW MANAGEMENT CORP. £5-3346 


Rceo Park 93-24 Ouuens BM (62 Ave) 

4 RM SUITE $350 
Supt or 796-2600 
RJVERDALE 


50(5 E Ftbuhn pntpsloMl tr- i 
ChltecTs 2 BRjhl Cells, troiTtoM tniflt- 


ins. S9S0 mo. B32-MM. ' ' 

5(TSE. HI tlr comer, small I BR. Marry 
extras. Min 2reosleaie.s48Siwo.lmm 


occuo. B3Z-2963 


54 ST E-l BR apt, fulhr torn. a/c. mod 
bfdg, 341 hr drman, 5600/ mo. Eva £J 
wkend 638-1655; days SK-MTOxtoB ■ 


WHITEHALL PROF. CENTER 
2 SUITES AVAILABLE 


599.900 .tor 5+ beeytHully wooded 
acres with compare ail wood cmmtry 
home. Solid cost 6 beam construction 


NO FEE (212) 796-2600 


healed & Insulated for year-round use. 
Magnificent rural setting on secluded 
country read with mountain brook near- 
by, on Ihe beaten tourist path but easi- 
ly accessible to all Berkshire attrac- 



55 ST, 14TE. Nicely fum 3 Rms In hreu- 
i ryriey w-cond wdo_ _S400 


BREAT 
OF 
FRESH , 
COMI 
TO CHE!' 


56 ST, E. Fabulous o'sizad 3V u lVa 


EMPIRE STATE BLDG 


Mbs. 22nd fir w/ferr, Total Spanish die- 1 
cor. Ultra mad btog w/tull sva. Swim 1 


beaut turn suite. 2 pvt ota+sbownn 
sec remit area, hi fir. screen lJJOff, 
lowrsitaL736-7B8S 


pooi^gYl mo. i mm occ. RexiMe lie. 


S85to1.14Bsqtt.CaU (201)634-2731 

Desk Rtm-HaahaUafi 1381 


58 ST W. 1 BR Hflthse apt! 
mew id park. 24 hr Orman 


view M nark. « to reman bldg, rent 

air, 1750. Call 247-3189 

5B5T. &7lh Avenue, Tumjpoc 3 to are, 

MMHtr hl ^ tfia 

60’s E FANTASTIC FIND! 


Large, lux 1 '* 
loade^ 
affordablr 
RENTAL SF^- 
FROM$.- 






?*■; r*' “ 


. •: .VS- , 


V; 






V V ; 








-•vr. •■■■ 

wr: Vj-f i 


■.iA 


V.'. . . ^ 




sti 

'• W: 


'■ - r ^$i 


: 


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aij; 


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1 : 




Apvlmd&Ikifo-llanMte 



Three, Fow i Five Booms 1513 


14 STREET NEW HIGH RISE 

EVERYTHING 

AT YOUR J 

BECK & CALL! 

COURTNEYHOUSE 

55 West 14 


24 Hr CONCIERGE 
CENTRAL AIR COND 
FREE GAS 
TERRACES 
DISHWASHERS 
CARPETS) HALLWAYS 
TRANSPAT DOOR 

Eastof West Side* - ' 

STUDIO &1 BDRM APTS 
Agent or Supt . 924-0266 

AGENT 

HAMPTON MANAGEMENT CO. 


MTH ST SUBWAY AT DOOR 

Manhattan Vermeer 

77 7th Avenue 

.7A HR DOORMAN SERVICE 
.FREE DAS 

.YEAR ROUND INDIVIDUALLY 


fijwtawrts Mifc-Mantattw 


MULTI-LEVEL 


In The Heart Of 
GRAMERCY 
PARK' AREA 

134 E. 22 St. 

Swdow i « unusual I bedroom tfuolexK 

pfea'sisrlaisra 

luxury amenities, 

$370.(450 

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 
677-2910 

Ren It no Agent an Prcflrfxi daily I, Sup , 

J.l. SOPHER & CO. INC 


FANTASTIC 23-3 BEDRM 
HIHSe VALUES 


fl parb ngt fa Qnfin.» Ma 4 «tt a u 


Three, Fort 1 Pm Romos 1513 


37 SI to 38 St At 3rd Ave 
There is Only 




1 - ■ ■ H_|L_ n >--■« ..... 

npa naans unm ii.-magDiu93 


Three, Fwr ft fin Roans 1513 Three, Fb* ft fin Room* 1513 


60 S WEST 
UNCOLN CENTER 




Rparts^Mtn.-Mafcrttai 


LiipigvgiTfl 


MURRAY HILL 

HEWS 


160.EAST 38 ST. 

Private Street & Dnvewoy - 

36 Stories & Year Round 
Swim-Health Club 

Member Plan k 
. Splendour 
Magnificence 
Security 

STUDIO.U2BDRMAPTS 
. 490-0114 

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 
OPEN 10 AM IpJLPM 
PARK FREE TO SEE APTS ■ 

AGENT 

Hampton management co. 



48 St, 212 E Prewar Drmn 

1 BR-wbf $385 ■ 

AlHomrar shifla S2VSUr EL 5-2277 


MANHATTAN'S 

PREFERRED 

LUXURY APT RESIDENCE 


Murray Hill 


25-stwy I ux residential tower 

SPECIAL RENT DEALS 


AT 310 RIVERSIDE OR 

MASTER APTS 
"MM* 1 . 

NEW LOW RATES 
Attractive 1 & 2 Rm Apts 




1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS 
ALSO STUDIO APT 

Aaotvjlbldp or WA 9-0644 


15Sf,21Q&230E 

FACING THE PARK 

"TO! IMSSGBSW" 

Studio $270-$299. 


WE’RE 


21 St, 201 East 

QUAKER RIDGE 

FULLY AIR CONDITIONED 
24 HOUR DOORMAN 

Jr 2 Bedrmjerroce, $500 


See Us Today For 
Oulstandin^Renlal Values 


2Bdrm2-WBthApf. 

. SKYLINE & HUD RIY VU 

Deluxe Studios & 1 Bdrms. . 
. 1 & 1 £ Baths 

Professional space available 
lobby floor 1200 sq. ft. „ 

IMMED & FUTURE OCC. NO FEE 
Open Oulv& Sunm 9AM-5PM 

Phone 873-4020 

68th-69th Sis on Broadway 

OWNER MANAGEMENT 

MILFORD MANAGEMENT CORP. 

ALSO SEE THE 




Jr 3 $3204335 I 


mm 

Hi 


77E Limestone A/C Stu $218 

BrRnlb, jtelned Nn_3es-T000 




76 ST AT FIFTH AVE 

Unbeatable Value! 

16 W 16 ST 


CHELSEA LANE 


LAURIE BRANT 

UNIQUE APARTMEHT50S-4CT 


16 ST, 54 WEST . . 

3 ROOMS . .' $386.52 

PHONE: 47W465 I wo^wAdavsorcetl owner 


23 St,208 W-Elev Bldg-Drmn 

Livrm with separate beam, kftclKrt 
6 file burn S285 NO FEE., 
noon weeMavs or call owner 
cr 533-1300 


Town House 

AT PARK AVENUE 

108 EAST 38 ST 

A MAGNIFICENT TREE-LINED 
STREET OF LOVELY TOWN HOUSES 

IBedrm Apt $430. ALSO 

■Studio 1295 

DOORMAN SERVICE 
FULLY EQUIPPED KITCHENS 

•' SPECIAL 

Several Hi-Fbor Apts With 
Wood-burning Fireplace 

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 

CALL 532-8500 

NO FEE CARLYLE.Dwner/Momt 


"‘WSUBWBMJf 

LAST CHANCE 

FOk REMAINING 
STUDIO APTS ■ 
ONLY $289 


SO’I E NEW BLOC 

BVERCOURT 

429 E 52 ST 

PRESTIGIOUS 37-STORY BLOG 
AT-TH E-RIVER 
MAGNIFICENT RIVER VIEWS 

3 Rms. 5fh Fir, $575 

3 Rms, 23th Fir, $625 

4 Rms, 7th Fir, $650 

Aoenl premises. 751-1110. or 

Charles H. Greenthd, Inc . 

IS East 48 SI PL 4-9300 


5D's-70's EAST 

PREWAR BLDGS 


FRO 

APARTMENT. CABLE TV AVAI- 
LABLE. 

YEAR ROUND _ 

POOL- AND HEALTH CLUB 
(MEMBERSHIP PLAN) 

1, 2 & 3 BDRM SUITES 
FROM $450 to $}40Q 

Entrance on 64th St. Between 
Broadway & Central Pk West 


Open 7 Up. » wi 1DAM. fo A PM. 
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 
PROFESSIONAL SUITES 
AVAILABLE 


PHONE 595-2240 


J.I. SOPHER & CO. 4214835 

OPEN DAILY UNTIL 8 PM 


50'sE. SUTTON PL 

Huge 2 bdrrn *dlnlng rm & maid's rm, 
jed service entrance, bulll.fn washer & 
orver. Elegentapt. No fee. si 300. 

J.I. SOPHER & CO. 421-4835 

OPEN DAILY UNTIL B PM 


DP.YDEN EAST 


v/ofcovefr$370 
edfm$460 * 

TV AVAILABLE 
srt on Premises 




80'S E-iOVELY STUDIO 

avail bwneil.'031SiBO.34B-63W eves 


3nfAve.ll! (be) 13-14Sts> 

THECONTEMPORA 
. Ill THIRD AVENUE' 
ATTN: NYU-COOPER UNION 
New School and others 
See Us for Area's Best Boys! 
17STORYLUXURY BUILDING 

SUMMER DISCOUNTS - 
PLUS 1 MONTH FREE 
Move Now-Lease Starts Sept.l 
Large Sludio-sep Kit $234 

12*20 LIVRM-H I QUIET floor 

Studio^leep dcove $254 

17th FLOOR- 12x20 LIVRM 

3-316 Mlbdrm}$285-$340 

Same.wm wfratowetf Kitcfwvteth- - 

CABLE TV-HOMEMOV1ES 
Owner Premises Mon-Sat 9-5 
CALL 533-0403 


27 E Tremendous Mod Brnstn 3 
1 FLIGHT UP A/C ONLY..S255! 
TRULY A STEAL PAL 838-7400 


27 ST E-3 rms, A/C $250 

NO FEE call Mr. veil* 532-9827 



4th AVE Vf5 (Comer 13 SI) 

. VILLAGE AREA 


2tri E/Esst Rlwr Drive 

WATERSIDE - 

I able at die lowest new 


VILLAGE AKA . 

a™ rents is i l« a ve 6281 3oc I New Owner/Mgmf 


Beautiful A/C 316 Rm Apts 

-24 HOUR DOORMAN SERVICE - 

: FREEGAS-NOFEE 

AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 

Call Mrs Adams 986-2397 

Monitor See Suob 1 Oe Premises 



• IMMEDIATE 
OCCUPANCY 
ComeSee Why 
We ve Rented’ 
56 Beautiful Apts' 


PRESTIGIOUS 


REGENCY 



S4TH STREET. 200 WEST 

3 RMS $291 

4 RMS $401 

( Include* Electric lor normal use) 
See S«>t on Premises 



55TH ST-300 W LUXURY BLOG 

THE WESTERLY • 

WALK TO.. 

THEATRES, CENTRAL PARK 
LINCOLN CENTR, THE COLISEUM^, 
24 hoot Doormen Ceritrt a/C 

STUDIOS $265 

1 BDRM APT $335 

2 BDRM APTS $525 

IMMEDIATE/ NO FEE 

AglPrem Duly & Sun lOam-tan 

541-8136 


IN RfVERDALE 
Minutes from Monhottan 

The Century offers every inno- 
vation, every service and every 
convenience. There is'24 hour 
building security, you con Walk 
the free-lined streets in safety. 
And the schools, both private 
and public, ore the very best. 


OPENING 

Of Our Magnificent 
bidoor'Tennis Club 

(4 ctwnptanshlD efastalurf tennis 
courts & 2 squash courts) 

Live at the Century and Play 
Tennis AH Year Round 

THE HEALTH QUB 
OF THE CENTURY 

Olympic pool/AI l purpose 
Health !:•*/ Ballroom 
Luxury lounges 

Central Air Conditioning 
Free Gas 

1,2 & 3 Bdrm suites 
from $330 to $768 

RENTING OFFICE ON PREMISES 

Phone (21 2)796-2600 
2600 Netherland AV 


SEE OUR DISPLAY AD IN THIS 
SUNDAY'S TIMES 

Directions: From Manhattan, 
take Henry Hudson Parkway 
(north) to Koppock Street exit. 
Proceed on Koppock Street 1 
btock fo first traffic light. Bear 
left just beyond traffic Gghl 
into NelheHan'd Ave. By River- 
side Express Bus. CaH for the 
Bus stop nearest you. 


LUXURY BLDGS 


DFFERSTHE FOLLOWING. . 
LUXURY BUILDINGS-ALLWlTH 
. 24-HOUR DOORMAN 

.ATTENDED GARAGE i 

.AND MOPE, MUCH MOREy ■ 

THE STRATFORD' : 

1385 YORK AVE{73-74 STS} 

FLEXJSEDwii'**?^.... -SS9S 
IBEDRM APTS . IWW7S 

THE PAVILION _ , 

500 EAST 77 (YORK AVE) ’ 

CALL S3S-S10O 

, 'THE BRISTOL ; 

• 300 EAST 56 (2nd Ave) " 

1 BEDRM AFT^^ 431 ! 1 ! SA95 

FLEX 2 BE DBMS 1825 

THE CALDWELL ; 

1520 YORK AVE |KWi ST) 

CALL 535-7970 

IBEDRM APTS *.... 

FLEA? BErDRMS 

2BEDPMAFT 

THE CAMBRIDGE \ 

500 EAST 85 (YORK AVE) V: 

jbedrma^**® 0 

THE NEWBURY. 

250 EAST 87 [2nd AVE). ;v 

CALL 831 -TWO 

FLEX 2BEDRMS -.c 

3 BEDRM APT - 

THE ANDOVER 

1675 YORK AVE.(88th ST) 

CALL34MJW , _ 

1 BEDFM APT5 S440-470 

3 BEDRM APT IH0 

NEVER A FEE!! 

FOR ADDITIONAL LI ST I NGS ' 
CALL CENTRAL RfeNTG OFC - 

Glenwood 535-0500 



60's E.3J&,456,PH 

SHCioin studlD alcoves, l bd, 2 bn 
luxury, doorman, a/c. nuoe doseis. 
Fr. 1456-51000 bkr UNI-8950 



69 St, 233 & 301 E 

Modem Hi-Risa Bldg with 
24-Hour Doorman Service 
Studio & 1 Bedrm Apts 

Anptv SuDtprem or call AwA 


70'S EAST NOFE 

UNIQUE 2 BEDRMS ; 

Swettjus vjrtr w/format dlnl 
bathi. Wiener w/breakiast i» 
r»c*. Mar-; cknrh. On* ol 
mm dtcMIsIua wugs. Every anwr, 
MUST BE SEEN 

GLENWOOD 


20*5 EAST (a> 3rd Ave) 

CHESAPEAKE HOUSE 

201 E. 28 


STKDfO& l BDRM APTS 

f Central Air Cord, 

24 Hour Conderge - 
SujdorAgent- 689-8984 

HAMPTON MANAGEMENT CO. 


Wi BetwLex<.3nJAves 

The Townsway 

LUXURY BUrUMNG 

145 E 27th St 

11A, 316 mis $398 
•- Also 2 Bedrm, 2 bath Apt 


4 Lexington Ave 

1 EVERY DAY 11 AM-7 PM. 
to, 1 Bedroom & Mm; 


Owner Management -NO FEE 


20*5 E. 24hr LuxDnm>BIdc 

NOFEE 

Hl^.1 BEDWjLStt KTfcb mp 

magnif i mdui 
C entral A/C & Gas Included 




20'sEAST ' . ' NEW 

2BEDRMS'$548 

- Sep dhi. hKhWse.no ft*. 

il SOPHER & CO. 421-4835 

OPEN DAILY WlTlLfPM 


SB’s THEUANE 

315 East 21st St 
Lgel Bedim $320 
Studio 5235 - , 


LEXINGTON AVLi 37 ST. 
In the heart of 
Fashionable Murray Hill t 
Huge Bedroom Alcoves 
$405 to $465 
Full 1 Bedroom Suites 
$435 to $515 
Flex 2 Bdrms, 2 Bths 
S628 to $825 

Extraordinary 
2 Bedroom Duplexes 
w/separate dining 
rooms & 3 baths $975 
6834264-5 

Renting agent an sfembes daflviSun 

J.L SOPHER & CO., Ini 


comer Lexington 

120 E 34th St - 

The Murray Park 


28edrm J 2bthw/<fimng 

ALSO - 

large Studio 

^tQFpremhto.lOAWtotfM 


MURRAY HILL 




70 S, 80 S EAST NO FEE 

OUTSTANDING “ 

Studio & 1 eedrm Ante In fuwry door- 
mar Ditto. Fully equiODed Wither i, 
greal iSmcS, I arc* ■luoows. Top *. 
nirlly. Finest area&. SA!(M#r 

GLENWOOD 535-0500' 


llllrall 

HwllWtll 


0® 


seen. 1 turned occuhkv. No foe. S9BL 

J.LSOPHa&CO. 6834264 


83STW-Chc(timr^Sfttdk> 


SlXJ+DMUMSN) 




S _ .8 



KSTE 

i! 


14 ST. ' 34 Hr LULDflH Bids. 

PARKER.GRAMERCY-, 

7WESrHTHST 
'. NO FEE 


20’s Ei NO FS. A/C APTS 
20t225t New7Sfory Bev 
WALKTO WORK. CONVTOSUBS 


WAU&T0 WORK. CONVTOSUBS 

1 Bdfm Duplex 2 bths $400 


34 ST, 408 W 




Buying 
through 
a real 
estate 
broker? 


Smart. Rea! estate 
brokers can save you 
time and effort. They 
know, the market . . .. 
where the best pros- 
pects are , . . can help 
with the many .details 
connected with the 
transfer of property. For 
a broker irvyour vicinity,- 
check the listings in 
these' classified pages. 
The' New York Times 
carries far more ads of 
real estate brokers than 
arvy other newspaper in 
the New York area; 


60s ROOSEVELT ISLAND 


250 Apts 
: Rented 
in 60 Days 

On Roosevelt Island 



IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 

1 Bedroom; $443to$481 

2 Bedrooms S523to$579 

3 Bedrooms $678to$795 

3 Bdrm Duplex ...$772to$832 

No Fees 

AU UTILITIES INCLUDE 
. WALK TO FINE NEW 
ON-ISLAND SCHOOLS 

Ktndergirtai to 9th Grade 

All Luxury Amenities - 
All Year Swim & Health Club 

(Mcntanhlp Plmj 

212-832-4515 

nmmastp 

Aerial Tramway from 
59th St & 2nd Ave. 

J.l. SOPHER &£0„ INC. 


Jr IBedrm; 2 FI $469 

1 Bedrm, 3 FI $544 

1 Bedrm, Ding, 29 FI $625 

2 Bed, 216 Bth, 33 Ff $840 

ANDAT 

REGENCY EAST 

301 EAST 64 ST 

& CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING 

T Bedrm Apt,9H $510 

2 Bedrm Apt, 10H $750 

Call 838-1616 

NO FEE. CARLYLE, Q»w/Mfln»l 


60s EAST 


inmwt ecc. 2 btti, lux hi rtie, nlue 

J.l. SOPHER & CO; 4214835 

OPEN DAILY UNTIL 8 PM 


*- 5," AW. full 2 bedroom 2 
bib! Duplet. T8n. eeUIngs sotrth Xao 
sen kiidwn iflviwisner S 2 (ntranes. 
»td much mm. imni be m un.OO. 

POn Am Rentals 628-1300 

1049 Lex Ave cor 75 SI open 7 Dare 



70{3fd]MOD3K$289 

2OT.R * U'B R + fire O&e. Sail 876-77U 


VC^2ffi$S5J7 

Alan^aUM-m 


60(5th)Tru ElevTnhs3$379 
201ft +14‘BR+prh 0err.5ifn7fr-77A3 


y?rri?T^ 







it: v iMl liLh III 'i Wj 




PIJFCSifTW 


70‘s (CPW) 1 BD $275 
brlte, art btxfc. od m 7S 7-61 71 



Conl'd on Following Page 


































































. : -L 4 -w • 


- _ . : 1 - . v_.si #*■ - Ji # vO *• - r * 


•; . v'4,: •■*;. 

• . A 


THE NEW YOEK. 7TMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1926 




» ! i 


:ri 


Mprtnaas ItafanL-Haaterttao 


Rn (toons 1513 


Cant'd From fttcediagPage ■ 


touiest 

200 WET 79 ST 



niOL Oil SUM Mr. 




71ft EAST 

' 300 EAST 74 ST 

N EW 37STO KT TQWR APTBLDG_ 


wmmaprvM 


f415E4rrmwtftW 




MS 


acta, Reasonable. 


72 St, 245 E PREWAR ORMN 

FREE ELEC 
34-Wind !Gt $495 


Aoent on cremtses 


734-4000 


ssaairasr.!!f% 

I4msjr2bttins + terr.HiiH| 


72E'2Qxl4LR-l5'BR-LavelY K/t 

Semi Lux Bev3J6 $317 

«WteMwStwrB4teR»«t-3330 


[ 72ST40 
iBdrrtm 
. lease- MMlOT 


. 73 ST-503 EAST (NR YORK AVE) 

Beautiful Renovated Apts 
Studios, 3, 31/2 & 4 Roams 
Studios $225-$275 
Bedim $275-5350 

HQ FEES I MMEp OCCUPANCY 

™ AGENT Oft PREMISES, 

PM 


SEVEN Oft V5 WII 


73(3rtJ20*J3LH+12xUJflR+SeoKlldl 

Jmmac Lux E/ev 3 $278 
-Singles Bld-grt area-no fee 
361-3330 


73d ST taw 2-3, Lroe 1 BR. I 


Hilda, sunny southern, sunken LR.^n 

Wia mosonl 
CaJl^HB 


ss after 7. er wfcmb 




more. sets. 


74 ST tCPW). Brawn stone; sunny yn 

tedrai, modsri kKchen S27Q 

7S5T (CPWI. Unique. 1 BR, So 
parquet Hrs: ono shutters 


parquet ms. win 


HUS HLTY.MTW 77. i»VMS 


fJJC 


7 3 RWl^Jpt 

^ :3 ^ C ^D CR0NS255 


WST.E. 


■elevated Mda. 

Pan Ant Rentals IMP Let Awe 42B-IJS0 


flpdB^sttrfBnL-HanfBttoB 


Tine, far A Fhe Rooms 1513 


BO'S 6 WS EAST 

. IS THERE A 


NEW 



IN THE HOUSE? 



AIsO: 

many 


nurses, 

other 


attorneys & 

* professtonds. 


(Wey^^Moctatnm 


n Hospital} 


ARE THERE 

VALUES 

IN THE HOUSE! 

YES! 


THE BIGG EST & BEST 
LUXURY HI-RJSE 1 
ON THE WST SIDE. 
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 
SPAOOUS 1-BH5RM APTS 

$350 to $375 

Alia flexible a-Bdrm Apts S4S0 


MILL ROCK 
PLAZA 


345 East 93 St 

r 1st Ay 


) . 

. _ Tenants _ 

24 -nr doorman & all luxury amen in es 
RENTING AGENT ON PREMISES 
DAILY' 

PARKF 


JNOAYTOTQ6 
ETO SEE APTS 

Ji. SOPHER & CO., INC 
376-5622 


J’sEAST Cor 1st Aye. 

Yorkshire House 
401 E. 81 ST. 


BEAUTIFUL 1 BEDRM APTS. 
FREE CENTRAL Al R COND. 
ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED 
24-HR DOORMAN A SECURITY 


74 1 M) 1BX I4LR-154T3BR-KI T 

New Renov Bid 3 $249 

Angles Bld&area-no tee . . TN 1-3330 


■ 74 ST, K) W (CPWI Fine rtmen bldo 


74 East Nofee Elevator ) Rim, 

Cathy ju5 d B n amlxm7 ^-s&og 


74 ST, 2] E. NO FES. Newly nenov 16 


Vbfa. 1 Bdnas S4V5-SS95. Fum opts 
avail. Agent gran. 7 Days. 283-75W 


sty 


i I 


75 ST, 323 EAST 
Renovated k 
- Brownstone 

JR.2BDRMS 5440450 

2 BR Garden /Duplex $650 


Gradous Arts/Eaxsed Brie Walls _ 
SEEN 11 AM-5 PM NO FEE 
. TURTLE BAY ProcerNes 86Q-88W 


75 SI, 5ME-Laryr 3ft rat. 30Z& 
— Wt, 5dOS«H 

doms32S. 


75_ST, 250 VNge 2 BR. 71ti flr. Front. 

New eawn f 
dOSdl.7W-02S9 


S375.I 


iMtdi&newbatti. Lee 


25St(3rd}overelad3nnirt 

$263 Call TN 0-2141 


75 E Semi Lux elev *3’ $256 

Great ter 2 shales— 348-1000 


: -75 (3rd) Irge A/C 3 $250 

perfect tor 3 slnrtes— .348-1000 


7SE Mod BflHtn 1 BRS2&S 


! i 


Sum* Beeuftttrt Apt. Bio Kltefi 
A/C(of UmIPaI 838-7600 


« 2I0 E ofl 3rd Ave. Iro 3ft rats, 
, dinette, 1350 mo. moo, a/c. 
elev. no fee. surt M 


76 E SOLID CHARM 1 BR S2M 
5eBkUAwi-irltorslitoles..3%-lo 


76 ST 952 FIFTH AVE 

Drawn. 1 ERS475:_2_BR tadns Part. 
STO; 5mwtersm Anty7/-woo 


r loe 3 rm art;Mf-fn-Mr.- 


StoFee-7SE;a/c3S259 . . .861-3330 




SWS“ 

ta 1SnflroGreer U462AW771 472-1878 


r a 


77SL20SE. 


A/C Hi I 


■ Smlnrcall UN 


77 i3rd)_mod A/C rot blflo- 


Jpasssmm 


78 St. 149 W. TREE LINED ST 


el. sky I lonf flD&Ynotf.tixH lances* 


tfS^ batfi'rfaad rtide mTi&Lt Bdrnu 
tO S340.DUPIK 


CORP. 477-0100 


78 ST., 442 E. 

A/C. MDB 


NOFEE 




AT TO SHARE *425 PAL i 


^71 ST E. EXCELLENT C 

^"SkEBPl 


79Bi STREET LUXURY BLDG. 

I- 333 E. 79th SL 

Studios $325 
i 1 Bcdrm fr$430 

^ 2Bdrmfr$560 

7 ,| R-COND._tva V ^H^AN 

AwmtcnPrenUM 


HOFEI 


79 St .,435 E.(cor YorK Ave| 

: ;New Owner/Mgmt 

Beautiful 3W & 4% Rm Apts 


iszs^Uw 




ST. W 
imM 
SUI, 


rms. * i -i.iia 

mn. An kos. 


—E- aeV.fl/nJr 
110 ;nr 
BEftGMMtl 


9:3 mis 5280/ 

"&ma 


to SI, 157 W. Nta.5 fin art. 3 BR. Ip 
■ - No Deft. Reft 


uc eft in Ul, 
rood. Adults— 


HP'- 







ars.w.. i 

If.sffl0.jj 


D.J BRart hire- 






Smo. 


BO'S E.etl Lex 

ss $sm 


FEE A/C I & 2BR 
w/tens, reottap, 
USHW 


■; 80s! Huge Prewar 414 $600 

WtHtR.iMnedelCT Btp flen 47M130 


80s e Javdy aiev bids- 

■"aniiggaea" 


B0 E magnif twnhse 2 BR S336 
feAwteGd ter sharing— 348-1000. 


(Os-ott East End Av _ 530 El W St 


80s E Modern 4 rmdurtex. lft bttis 


“«ri 

M Flr-Dinerm-Drmn . _ 724-2509 


m "HUGE 280RM FLR THRU*' 
2 Can giMQfnfelOI-R-Eg l n Kit 
Rent dtblUinly OVV^4.7N1-3330 


„ 80's|CPW]Mod3$315 

9 N ceil, aroEt life, uc 7S7-6171 


NOFEE - - 

Agt On Premtser LE 5-9658 


STsE. NEW 24 Hr Lux onni BMP 

PARKER 86TH 

444 EAST 86TH 
NOFEE 

HlWE 1 BEDRM J4S5 

Central A/C & Gas Included 


P ARMAN CO- 74*4700 or 029-360 


80'sE. 


NOFK 



Excel value. I» til rise, limned occ 

J.I. SOPHER & CO. 4214835 

OPEN DAILY UWTIL8 PM 


80’SE 

ISttC 

ijvfl utilities 6rti Flr.OfUy 

JJ50PHER&CO 


NEW 


Fantastic value, tun one bedroon, suite 
with sen dining room, indoor port ■ 
Mies 6lti Fir. Only 5C5 

722-5768 


NO 


80’sE RIVER'S BEND SOI E. OTttl 

SUPERB 2 BR, FIREPLACE 

PANORAMIC VIEWS OF THE .CITY 


Roar lo ctJling urtnW'W, central A/C 
nra bWa, W window ElK. oversized LR 


i IW. Tear round rootfoo oootmn. 
HK si,07V incfall wiL UN 


80? RIVER? BEND 501 E 87 

Convertible 3BR Terrace 


*716 1 NCLUpES ALL UTILITIES 
Cent «/c lux Hr to cell windows 
awtrikng dly. ir DR converts to 3rd 
BR. Yr^nd rttop port avail. UN1-S300. 
PLl-mnrtntra 


80? EAST [LOWi 

1 BEDROOM +DB^ 


1.1 

D. Buttons, Inc 


Sunny 

751-9790 


80s East River? Bend 501 E. 87 

UNUSUALLY LARGE THREE 

Floor to cdHno windows Id linurvC/A 




1-5300. PL H10P witiftr 


80V90sE 


RIVER VIEWS 


Big 1 BR in new lux Hl-Rise, 2jHtr 
doorman, Imm go. tra fee S360t DtHs 


J.LSOPHK&CO. 4214835 

OPEN DAILY UNTIL 8PM 


PARK AVE VIC 


80’sE. 

Hugo 2 ,b*na + sen din, fwitwgc 
views, limned occun. no fee *895 

J.I. SOPHER & CO. 4214835 

OPEN DAILY UNTIL BPM 


Kft E-MODERN REWOV BLOG 
ladnra+Hvn ti+ggtiiUQOQ 
I 2 hdrtns-t-Mt ■ ■■— 

I— — 2nUfl|B 

■feMOO 


an E.cmt a/eormn bum 
416 + eat in kit $5 10 


»sSt 


S350 lull 24wrt ^.dUB]nl.ng br gwn- 
aonesep. surniy wlrxtoweii Htrfwihed- 
nnnn lacUtg suutti. Pan Am. 628-1300— 


B?o l Mp n hi Ito wry 
man, all amenities. . 
Unbelievable, value. 
tits. NO ftJtCall 876 



3rms(eattnlut+mstrbdngJ . . . .OS 
All rood appiftooes.No Fee B6Q-2770 


©5'5-Ott mV; AHr Grdn Pafta 1 BR, 
lull sep klftHrmiet firs, wtnd wti, 


HC 


me 


mil 


f:30-4:ai: 
1354-9412 


effS tWEAl, pre-war, soadous 3ft; 

- 580-9944 




(low) Lot 7 bedroom I 


80S E 
11x17 


8Q~S CPWX-LG | BRS390 ' 
25 ft LR. Idt browratooe i 

ounce, so bd, brt walls. 5954000. 


SELL 

through want ads 


BUY 

through want ads 


USE 


THE 

NEW YORK 
TIMES 


for all your 
want ad needs 


flpartneats 0Bfm.-SW»ttaa 


Thn, far SFh« Boons 1513 


80’S EAST 


Swim All Year In 
Endossd Rooftop Pool* 


ApMtaNtsUBfonL-HvtortbB 


Tins, For 4 Fire Boons 1513 


45E.89 


ON/AAD15OHAVE-405TQRIS 

ONE BEDRM SUITE-<th fl. 


PnvDteBoIc ....... — $550 

TVilO BEDRM surrE-arst FI 

2 fihs, Private Bdc. $890 

-THREE BEDRM SUITE-1 5Hi FI 

3 Bths $1044 

FOUR BEDRM SU1TE-I9lh H. 

4 Bths -.$1375 

AMONG 

24-HR. 

38T 



ATTE N 
I SECUR 

PJL«XPR^ g^TD WALL ST. 

•Ou&MactxrstitD 
Agert on premises 

876-8813 


JNG 


80? E BETWEEN PARK & MADISON 


55 East 87 


STUDIO 8. 2 BDSM APTS 
PROF. OFFICES 
Central Air Cond 
24 How Doorman 

SeeSupt. 348-9277 

HAMPTON ^AGEMENT CO. 


80? EAST 


NEW 


432 E.*88th 


TOWNHOUSE STUDIOS 

81-level w/ranard I c brick terraces 
DUPLEX^Rl BEDRM 
ultra mode??. SsttS A onlm* 

831-3280 

Asenl m Premises Delft & Sun. 

J.I. SOPHER & CO., INC 


an & Ws EAST & RIVER VIEWS 

One Of Our Great Vetoes 
One Bedroom . With 
Separate Dining Room 
On!y$448...22n<ffL 

ALL UTIUT1ES INCLUDQ) 
at the fabulous all new 


YORKlif 
Tl 



9Wt St. comer Third Avb. 
InTheHeatof Yoskvitle 


722-5767 


Renting Agent On Premises 
JJ. SOPHS & CO, INC 


8ft CORNER 2nd Aw. 

305 EAST 86 ST. 


TOWffi 


256, Terr, hi flr $365 

3J6,T«TOce..$413.94-$490i0 

4J6,2bdnn,2btf),din 
area, Ten- ...$585.38-$649J0 



NOFEE' 


80'S EAST 

SUPERB 2 BEDRM 


Great exposure. OutsrondHig luxury 
Carl Sdturz Park. Fan- 
yalue!! S72S 


GLENWOOD. 535-0500 


ILt^ fad 1 1 n 

* * *- w a- ■■ - 

ImJWikHBSHldlldB 

Three, Far & Fin Rmus 1513 

Tine, For & Free Rsoitts 1513 

80? EAST MODERN19-STORY 

UNIQUE 

Grade Towne House 
401 EASTB9ST 

Unbeatable Valuesl! 
JRlBB>RM f $349 

83(Lex) Ig IBfrFgdn $273 
IDEAL FOR 2-3 SINGLES! 
348-1000 


•MBfisssaa^ ' 

tfSBBSSP* 

84 (PW -Semi lux dev 3 $247 

Windows In every nxxn 348-UJOO' 


K1 iCHfc" 

1 BEDROOM, $419 

APT 6F. IT X ITA". 21*4" X 2V6" 


ALSO AVAILABLE 

Convert 2 Bedrrn, $499 
- 2 Bedrrn, 216 Bath, $695 
CALL TE 1-7944 

NO FEE CARLYLE, Owner/McBJt' 

81(LEXJ20xMLR-16xT2BR-Eatn KJt 

New Renov 0evBldg-$348 

Sinrtes May SharaGrt area . . .861-3330 


BSSt. E. Naf building T .bedroom gad 
smteffl HvtaB rwraasWWWB A/Cfc 

»^ls TtS® 



SlSTE-dumnA/Cl BRart . 

85th ST, 515 EAST 

SI 5T.W, 2 BR arttst? duplex, bnnru- 
ESr^SSdwrf flnuvw S460 

85StWEABnunftie3$330 

brfte, hi ceiL mod aert. 706171 

a ST E. NEW ELEV TWNHSE 
2 W75 



- S45ILGri si nrtesbhto. 860-2469 


Solis Ismrtess&S. aa-foa 

«4snEMra , *i 

82 ST EA/C 3 RM APT 

lulls 2) only S235 no tee 860-2275 


82 ST, 150 W. Rne 10-Sty Bldg. New 

“‘tataSar 1 ■ 



86th ST, 446 EAST 

TA nns-iraned occ. A/C 24-hr drum 


86 ST, 41 W. Off CPW. Atit.7K,l Wrm, 


^STWPARK 


SfflfctSSS 

. SZ75-Grt tor rearing! 348-KOQ . 

ptfMetn incKQ-oan 


•* W *—t ■■ « - — 

At** rams ttaaiLHfijnBinJii 


Tine, far ARrei 


1513 



Ms{5ftjPreww lijx5K$590 
-MtuUsm+sea 

,’..06-7743 


Eat-n-ULSiD. 


90 ST, 210 E. 


NOFEE 




3rmmod^^^tofs3 Dr 


«7N STREET 214 RIVERSIDE DRIVE 

SUMMER SPECIAL! 

move naiMtart rent Sept 1 
NO FEE. Luxury elev Udg. «tr end, 



96TH 5T, WEST NEWH1-RI5E 

THE 


msm 


733AMSTB2DAMAVE 
STUDIO, 1&2BDRM APIS 
MIDDLE INCOME ISNTS 

24 HOUR LfflffYAgWtfMNT 




1513 


*m i £D 
Act y or all ttMirSn 



111 SL545SK. GHuabit Unfti Am 

3 RMS 3250&UP 

4 RMS $410 & UP 

tporiroSortop Prmtbes 


inaw.m 

Minted, rm 

7BM446, 


demroewltr 
oiner SDpt 
owner . 


ZI85T IWestofBww) 

S5PAHCTERRACEEAST 

-Mod 


NOFEE 


*yLt*mm**l 


oca/ 


31131 


ST) 

lua 


CHfTNAL 


Central Park WEST at 9 T K 



ssvras 






PJS.3 



GRViLLW. Jr. l b drraart. hrite,< 


gSSWMSL. 

n tee. A/C. Omfintiso. see Sort 


1781 


Sth Av-PS 6, suntiv, ftg 8 


ww, wet oar, cent A/C. jftbl 
nit 8*96; AOs-ucF PMi roa. mt 
W/Utt LEIGH 628-2253 


Mil III il i ii mill 

nna. W Hr, nirtrt CM tpo Inct elect. 


owner raoating,~sicr 1 t a?S»^ 
POST 


— E-STEWA HT HOUSE 
3ft Rm Art. Hillllill imPl 


10 ST. 70 




SAUL BERGS— 6734040 


11 ST, EAST 
1&3 BEDROOM 


B m Hi Rise, River view roomy dosets 
tern, lodoor swbng poaLnr. mat 
oaraen nramenaae 24 nr guwd ave. se- 


curity syst. free msir anterma 
br mantfity. nufrt ra noq-n| 
moottily main! S35D-3 BJfl 
iMint 025. Wkdays M (212)4 


50's ROOSEVELT ISLAND 

MANHATTAN'S 

MOST 

INCREDIBLE 

CO-OPVALUES 



ON ROOSEVELT ISLAND 
You Will Enjoy 

Unusual Elegance 
Super Skyline Views 

Your children will walk to 
Fine New On -Island Schools 
Khmer oerten to 9fti Grade 


OUR AMAZING 
LOW PRICES 
MAKE THESE 
CO-OPS TRULY 
REMARKABLE 
BUYS! 


LARGE 1 BH)RM, Hi BTHS 


(A|ll HOB) 
Total Cash Price 


. $13,767.10 

Est rmrthlv mabit 
Eat rnonthly tax 


DRAMATIC 2 BEDROOM 

$17,397.98 

esi nwimuv w»f ocouczkvi swuji 


LUXURIOUS 3 BHIROOM 

m Bths, Windowed Kitchen. Balcony 
Ttf lICBSl! Prio* 

$22,541.73 


A4ANY DUPLEXES AVAIL 
Buy with Complete 
Confidence on 
Our 5-Year ' 
Repurchase Plan 


ALL YEAR SWIM/HEALTH 
CLUB IN BUILDING 

(Mantettte F» tWlnduded 
bi Maintenance Cnanni 


Now! Just a 5-Minute Tram 
Ride from 59 St & 2nd Ave. 


Furnished model apartmenh 
shown by appointment only. 
To arrange your visit caH 

212-8324521 

,INC 


6fi7MADiMN^EC6!ST) 
Offaring Bv Prawdus only 


50s E.-Beekman PI. Lro 2ft rm. 




51 It & BEEK^Wi PL. 


sumy 


— bdrmrel 

■yr ra moti be mm 



55STW.3MRMCOOP 

Quid, sunny too fir, fine etd bWfi nr 
CanwgteHall, Or* Or. shaog i trans. 
Avail Immed. 24 It drum, vsy real 
isrtee HIT Alexander. 582-7742 


ffSmt^rogfc 


umm 


1791 


6«ft EAST 

Time is Running Out 

Special Co-op 


56East 
65th Street 


Only Few Apts Left 


Budding has long term, 
low maintenance bv 
reason of fax abafanert. 
long ton mortgage 
aao operating costs. 


1 &2 Bedroom Apts. 

1 bdtm apt maintfr $246.44 
purchase price from $18,500 

2 bedrm apt Maintfr $43453 
purchase price from $31,000 


FfsiaTw^iofJ^hlgh crt 1 |m&.waod 


txxninp flrcolatts, and indlvidual- 
■ controlled MnMBM 


UE 


ling & air condl- 


5ELUNG AGENT ON PREMISES 
DAILY AND SATA SUN 
FROM 11AM to 4PM 


Phone 7444565 or 752-5950 

Ottering ay oroaieriiW only 


40? EAST 150E.69THST 

IMPERIAL HOUSE 

SULZBERGER-ROLFE ■ NC 535-4406 
Ofterintn Prwptdui Only 


80s East 


BRAND NEW 


60 EAST 
END AVE 


Mariana 


1791 1 Mariottoi 


1791 


89 51- 50 E BET PARK & MADISON 


32 STOREY 
EULLY OPERATIVE 

caop 


Super Studio, One, Two 
& Three Bedroom Apts. 



50 east 89 st- 


Between Madison & Park Ave 
Walking distance to 
most private schools 

APT 328 

1 Bedrm, 2 Bths, Bale 

SPACIOUS 

Total Cash Price; $54,270 

Est.Mo.Mainh $461.03 

Est.Mo.TaxDed: $308.89 

APT15A 

2 Bednns, 3 Bths, Bale 

Total Cash Price: $63,350 

Est. Mo. Mcrinfc $515.50 

Est.Mo.TAx.Ded; $345.39 


A£F 12D 

3 Bedrms, 3 Bths, Bek 
Total Cash Price: $74,772 

Est.Mo.Mainh $635.19 

Est. Mo. Tax Ded $425^8 


AT EAST 82nd ST. 

Huge 3 Bedrms, 3 Baths+Pow- 
der Rm, Form Din Rim, Break- 
fast Rm, Wind Kilch, Tremoo- 
dous Closet Space, $80,826 
EstMonMaintis$589 

Est. Mon. lax deduction S280J0 

Spacious, Bright, Sun-RHed 
Rooms, High Ceils, Views, The 
Features of an Older- Co-Op 
Pius the Luxury of a New Bldg 
IF YOU ARE LEMING NOW, 

INQUIRE ABOUT OUR . 
LEASE TAKEOVER PLAN 
Open Daily & Sunday 1 QAM- 7PM 

Phone 212-988-0950 


SELLING & MANAGING A$ 
BROWN HARRIS STT 
60 EAST END AV_ , 
OHarinBl»ypresrachK only 


80's fPorid-Garden View 
3 maaerfs, .soryaars. laundry, w«. 
sunny, excellent cond. MauL arty 
S65D. 

Kenneth Ives Inc MU 8-1900 


82 St. E-75EK1 End Av e t Art 2Q-C. 5ft 

S^ISiBS 


85STOFF5AV 




Call broto: TEHaOQexf sa 


5ft ROOMS 


SPECTACULAR VIEW 
15 WINDOWS 


Hi tl-gverlocfcs ] 

*^ 2 d8S™BI 

WdfcS671/niO Jricl rtfl. 1 
sn/DOO negot. Owner 
1^107; wfcdya P74-73M I 


86th STE. 

P^anrog Bdrna, J_Bft CM*. Modem 


w/pBfitrv. Indoor oar Ml 

oaraen, uu & lauwvrra, gas Ind. To 



90 ST El Lex Al 
m an, gri ctea, mil 
on yifitf mi utiw , 


UwmSiS^/aSSSajgB. nSrdl 


Cali Of-; 


SI/ - 



93ST ABE. (BET PARK & MAD) 
1BDRM DUPLEX/GARDEN 


Call Owrer624-4tn2 flaw or awt 


96 ST CPW-wnnv park I 


ESHMA7ED 6796 MAINTB+ 
ANCE DEDUCTIBLE FOR IN 
COME TAX PURPOSES. 


Three Hnondng 
Plans Availabla 


Come See Model Apts. 
FREE 1 HR PARKING 
WHILE VIEWING APTS 


OFFICE ON PREMISES 
Open Daily And Weekends 
722-8668 


SELLING AGENT 
-Church AAgmt. Carp. 
663 Fifth Ave 
[212)7594540 


W» NT 


H wrami rves, me H 
OffgjjTgbvaroaettLKonly 


BEEKMAN PLACE — East 51 5l 

Chorming & Unique Garden 




aufn trot-flned Mock. 
MB?. 

OWNER: 7SMH3 




Prlnc 


™lnt 
. | 




CPW APTS ALLSIZES 

J. CLARENCE DAVIES, INt 
661-224* PEGGY KOCH B7^5B72 


COLUMBIA Unhwrttr 
54 Moral raUde Drive. 

buyers. 



maiaKP 


FIFTH AVE DUPLEX 
80THSTRST 
ONE OF N.Y.'s RNEST 
APTS NOW AVAILABLE 

Master BR ktlti Roman 
pwW Itv 


I bedrms. . eadi .wtth pvt , bath 
area, mtrrarad i imUtam 


ntu 

3 caldrons 


ant'&i m^rn^kUriien & launrtv 
^HgMrmi, guest powder 


LEX AVE 8. 83 ST, 2 BR 


rMLWifc ^ ^n ary^wwd kit Ask 


130000 Daws a 


LEX AVE & 83 ST, 2 BR 

uMjatte. Lg^tan^rootinod Ut Ask 


Mod Av&79St5%nns 


area LR DR mad 
13? 


RSO l ffi ST-Aftft renov 5ft mu. be- 

-LsgstasS'**-*’"* 


SUTTON Pl-Exduswehr Co- 
ops 

MORTGAGE RNANONG 
D. ROSASCO 212-755-5653 


SUTTON PI SO-2BR Co-op 

Tfx Uh,.l«QL«ri M%.nHl!p *535 

m 


WEST END AV&JUE 

T frppf 4 nu . 



SUBUD 


MR^vJcTOR 724-3116 


WEA 91 St. 5 Ig rm , 2 BR^^DJ^ 


2 otts. very stare, well __ ... 

2* Hr dev. Parqhrtwd firs, new cera - 

m&MP maat 




Rudnick, Brett Wydcoff, Inc 

COOP SPECIALISTS. 867-4070 


Brass 


1703 


YANKEE STADIUM ARE A-7B R. roalnt 


Braekhm 


1707 


BROOKLYN HTS. MIKHet Lama Coog. 
3 berms, scrod lerrace. etc ting view, 
many extras, total price S6JD0. tall 
Gofiserg, 355-S99. 


I Or 


BKLYN HTS 2 txtm Lge Ir w/wM. (fit 
kit. far. Restored apt* Prlnc only. 
a55-512V9nro-12nni 



Jk$nHts4ftrma>aD 


JACKSON HT5-NcrttiWae Soottes 3ft 

ss* ft»2sras , »as& 


LITTLE NECK-Lovefy 3ftr» + 

5£ aass* 


MDSfty tax tree lod'g G<£ Exkas. C-R- 
7-5780 days: 631-7260 tve/arands 


REGO PARK large Cft-rra coo. malnt 

. ... — — 

IBM, 


l arge tax 


— dawn nairoert. 
or (910342-5674. 


REGO PARK 4ft 


^AffSn 


Dm AS 


a/c. eaMo 
AU64B50 


REGO PK-2 BR LUX Caoh ft tn CM. 
IcdoL^ -Prf^clasecil^ Nereasrt- 


WWK_Estrte ctasettft-No ms c 
ler retused mttrr avail SWrwe? 


REGO PARK 5 rm_C(H»-lnm^ 2 
tries, a/c net R 
69S-04ttSEves/i 


tries. a/c.iwnHiDj235naa. Besiatttr. 
wkto 


WOODSIDE. 2 BR 2 btb, twr. S336 
mairt, me bid, tax Ctax. all convs. 
426 6888 afternoons. 


w/w ado. low 

itttt'nt,6(ft>rax den Mvstretocate. 

■ 1142 


WOODSI DE-2 BR, 

intTSf. ...... 

call 429-2270 


POMONA PARK . 


3SMJ333 


^SW^honse rondo. -fan. 
CTTnHJait 2 Ig bflmSt psncUisl tnoBy. 


oven, eusher/oryer, gas heat, central 
■riom; & u Ltnx many Bdns.| 




SPRING V ALLEY- CO-OtL3BH. 2ft Wb, 
cj%aort,mn extra fteJJJWaBartL 
teebo o favenjMtto^ogTie? fn de- 
duc. S34 JD0JM-35M021 


SUFFBIN CONDOMINIUM 

2 BR. 2 bttis. A/C. w/ 


A ... 

Cncer 


SUFFERW-SpKfaculw BIW . S48J00 
3eouniuny dnegrated Staomte Towrv 
ImusCL T-i W - Tin bsmt A/Cw/w, all 
aaflncs. pool /tennis. 914-357-7174 


Valley Cottage 1 br condo 


RnrJetsey . 


1763 


SHEEPSMEAO BAY -Best location in 
Bklvn. Lux coup. 2 BRs. A/C. pooJJJr- 
man. Owner nriocled out of country. 
Rwt er srtl.Miijt make a deal J73-3567 


States totand 


1799 


St. George • Walk To Ferry 


Spadous 2 BR art.Excertlonal bm. 
Furn it wrfurn.Hartiar vu.Many 
*trati12.5ao unfum. 720- 


ST.George 2 BR bay view 


S273 mo malnt GAE & Air cord Ind 
512.000. cm 727-3572 


QgeeRS 


1711 


BAYS1DE BAY TERRACE 316 


at'SSflW ,nd 


BAYS) DE -Bay Terr Cmc. 3 br caw to 




cert a/c. 00017423-3614 


BEECH HURST. 


onltttxrtH 

■amenitie: 


^YDgR HOUSE 


1 Bedroom Resldrace 
Sacrifice S3&0Q0 
MO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED! 


OPEN 

HOUSE 


SATUROAY& SUNDAY 1 1AM6PM 

APARTMENT 9J 

MMS Rowells Cove Blvd. 
BMdttnnf, Queens 

7464)299, Eves BA 4-2703 


BEECHHUR5T AREA-WHITESTONE 

CRYDER HOUSE 


166-25 POWELLS COVE BLVD 
. J.SoureL 6 acre estate UrauriaisM 
sty two. 24-hr urtformed security 


onLJ.S 

mnSBSSi “ 



SaT-Sun 12-i H6-9453 


ELMHURST Go-oporattve. Justice 




FLUSHING COOP-1 Fore 
Zone 




FLUSHING 3 BR Condo 

2 rtbs,Mfyf/c«ro firs, nrVna avail,! 
6 pet mtg, substantial tx oed, mtd S4u s, 
001(9394546 


FLUSHING-Matal 
3 enxnyros. w/w, (S 


1 coco. Musi 

Pr S16J0Q. 


FLUSHING CMP-2 brtnB, bewNM ft 
mod. many extras. A roar steal ( Des- 
Deratv ta sell. W9-1633 


■MEaF 


Mh, Iwr 
-- Bon 


LUSH 




tirai 




only 


HOWARD BEACH AREA Attractive 2 

iW.call after iron 8wQa7 


HOWARD BEACH Ca-op. Saerfl. Spac 2 

§lKB&f fr ' CtoEh ’ *** 




HOWARD B EACH. 2BR 

iDm.DaniHa^^H 


D/w.Darallng, wwc 
MEfnd.Whislsdl2 


lft L.._ 

charge 

0485 


i13 inti 


4ft rms, 
MO 
476 




ms. malnt SITU th- 
ta t” 3 ***' 


g^jgygaLijM 


JACKSON I 

37 Av,M 




SAikforUiaa. 


NassaB-SeGFaft 


1713 


BALDWIN condo tnwnhcuse3BRjjgrt 
a/c. dual, walk RR. sbten. Fin temt. 


ftftasftttB & 


CO RAM— ADD LT aWM^ R|aO) 


.... .. _ Towntvome Coodo. 4 BR 
gft wt), full rtntemt.Qttl AA&5GS.BX- 


Tas. La saos Arm ST 


N CITy-SMC. |wnrw 1M «*• 


■■■Nlabdenuicel 
MOLLOY REALTORS 


*SKf7&-Vm 


GREAT NECK' 


GILCHREST HOUSE 
NEW ULTIMATE CONDOMINIUM 
„ LIVING ON OU I ET STREET . 

ING. IMMED OCC 




TOPS ALL 

516466-3860 

OBerlno Bv Prospectus Only 


GREAT NK-HORIZON HOUSE 


Cos 4 rms. new 
artjtB.nrtransp.Mu! 


» atfuna 


GREAT NECK-2ft nra $155 malnlm- 
ag^.^% lax dedud-Owner. Sft- 


800. NrbuOT 
QwnrrelOC 5164664867; 


.520- 

mo. 


2 BR. lft Mbs. A/C. crpta. elect Ufai. 
wash/drv. n»t pool, bdi J. patio. 93/r 
990^516-432-3484/62 HOI6 


•AEDFOPD. Bluerldge, 2 BR townhse. 




Westchester Co.' 


1717 


Bronxville Luxurious Coop 

large bedrooms, Ilyina room, ftrroal 
Jning room, jft baths, large entrance 
lover, cameling, tromendows ■ uwn 
m doorman, .near _ i riioortnB, 
churdies. tranawrtatlixi. Plus mi 
extras. Asking rota iSSJlOO. 

OWNER (914) 779-8677 


CLIFFS! DE PARK 
330 Winston Towers5 Lavishly 
fum deluxe cor apf-2 BR 2 bth- 
IR-kri-terr-2 c indr prig. Aft 
7pm 201-886-1306 ' ' 


PK-Wtosti 

:-2rttv-3rtt IV D li« 
west est-w/w ^artiHaapes, Leveinr 


CLtFFSiDE PK-Wtnston Towers-For 
sate bv owner 2 BR-2 Wtv3n! tk D ' 


Minds-many ext rVfi sssoro nrice. 
Owner rekxatirw saCOQ-Davs 212- 
922-5941 .eves 201-224^62 


cufeside PARK— Winshm Towers 
200, 2 BR, 2 Mb, deluxe (O. sunny 


west exposure, fmflpor 1 year^rid oc- 
days 217423-61®, eve's 201- 


PARK4rtnstog ^ Towns 
200, define 2 BR, 2 blh. TWi Hr, excel 
loatran to NY, sunnv 5W exposure, riv- 
er view, extras. 201486-1777 


MONROE TWP—Oearbraak 

Adult condo— awntry dub living. 2 BR 
2 btb Ranch 4+ NT express bus sue. 


By owner 545^00. 1609) 


PALISADES 

$699 CASH OUTLAY 
MOVES YOU IN!!* 




inmi Fort fae Rms .3513 


SRENLMi 

Come See >Miy 
Over 200 Apts 
WERE RENTED 
In 2 MONTHS 
WEST VILLAGE 
. HOUSES . 





i Room 2 B*m WtStio MM 
- $4 12 1>s $487 
6R0Bffl.3Bi3mi UHlttfBfKfixtCd : 
. ; $544104592. 

7 Anmrt Bdna Utffltto Indwkd 

$580 ia $669 
MANDa REALTY 
- 877-2000 


11am to 7pm, 7 days a week 


CAVE.il 


PARK AVE, 7 

Ibchuvak-oond $4W) 

lATE.OCCUPi 


Ms-CrUtSi 


Riverside Dr 


1380 

Near GW Bridge (181 SQ 
20 Story H-Rfset Lux Bldg 
A/C— 24HrDnmm 


IMMED I AT 

928-6000 
0X7-7693 



Riverside Dr, 202 (93 St) 


1 area. Ws- 


Roosevoit Island 

The Bestof * 
Everything For You 
& Your Children 
dta Price * 
You Can Afford - 


EASIWOOD 




.Walk to tlee new orM si and schools 


LOW LOW RENTALS 

1 BEDROOM r..$281 

2 BEDROOMS $359* 

3 BEDROOMS $395* 

4 BEDROOMS $421 

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED 

(*) Available uo^sxdal financing 


qualified aprticaift accreted In ovr 
tenant selection pool. 


Just a 5Hfmhute tram ride 
from 59fh St & 2nd Ave 

°8i mm®®?? 

212-832-4509 


JJ. SOPHS & CO v INC 

667 WAD ISON A VE i 61 ST) 


No Closing Costs 

at THE 


E 


1 B 2 B^RMC^^INIUM 

(Some with dess, bars & saunas} 


Convenient to everything! 


11 Miles to Mkftown Monh. 

BUS AT CORNER 


BRONXVILLE COOP S172, malnt & 
util. 3ft is* me. *at bt Men, crpl 114^ 
9S.9I 


CROTON. Commute, lux 3 BR town- 
house amdo. 2ft baths, A/c all ant, 

ftffiftwra 


HARTSOALE 


HIGH POINT 


train— all menjffesj 
MC view. JUSt *46,900 


Threshold Rhy 914-946-6990 


HARTSDALE1BR DELUX 


Hastings rioTrirt ex Twnhse Canda 
LR/beam cell, bay wnows. dlram, eat 


^rtson. PmIj 


— 914 
nonly 


LARCHMONT-SptC 4 nn Co-op 
wew an alno, e«t4n kjt, ft terr.j 


sssiAti&aurrfi 

nn 


N.W. YONKERS 

AWARD WINNING CONDO 


anrtngjWCte 






..terr., wa _ 
ft* mfpe. 


OSSINING-Unusuai 1 
sed 24 f " 


RYE Rid ge Garden c«dfrg norm 2 
terti to .11 v rm. (fin area, atr, new 




TARR 




I. oar. 


rm^i 

SJQS 


(9UlMfi.7989 


YORKTOWN Hh-Jeflenon vtkadutt 


conoo cor 4ft rm-2 twm lft Mh, 

wgng. pool, batcony S374n. 9M 


YORKTOWN HEIGHTS 

Adult nmdo^wol, tennis, clubhouse. 2 


Wrres, T. 

cant atr, extras. 
245-6268 




RsddnrfCe. 


1729 


Brt. ail sxi a/c end S56tamman an 




On Premises Health Qub 
Pool/Gym-t-Much mote! 

$39,990-Qeganf 1 Bdrm 
$56,990 ta $85,990 
Gracious 2-Bedm 




HOI 


WASH I 


urtuni, 

js^.’Eaa i a,s ,tls ''° an ' 


WASHINGTON NTS AREA ji 

hZJJZgiti $&&&?*** 


Westside No Fee 80’s & 90’s 
2, 316, 416, 5, 6, 7 nns lux 
bldgs, 24 hr service some w/ 
river vu. 865-5858 


WESTSIDE NOFEE 

1 & 2 BR BPts. TOs-fflOS 
_ side, Wn>. end. Crti 
Lux 


Call l«1 ■BOTO. 367-S79A 


ran __ 

ssr 


Vic 


Ave--3ft i 


777-Ii 


'MS 


Sz Book £ Over 


1515 


„7jp Andcnon^e^f^^Psry 


Models open KHmeom Daily *Swi 

Phone (201) 941-1900 

arhfsRjeb3nuBK.fi: 

ssas'faafisfftsft 

Andprsan_Aye Jlst.lIjniJ, fura left ft 


mi. td THE GREENHQi 
Tvc. Rnananpnterms ■ 
Ion wood |E Plan); Pri 


ot 

. . '.R. _ 

iwnefris of J40 3 tor 

(nxs not Indvde ft* P.M.U 
_ . ■WITH VA MORTGAGE 
Filing bv Formal Prospechis.NY 432 


SPRING LAKE HEIGHTS] 

■non oitorng xj 

stove, d/w. w/d 

S9M 

^■SjyTot a up. Yean 

aH-449-TTO 



KLV, 

roman, ISrninH. 
malnl + GSE + 1 


*.^5hr 


■w 


Riviera Towers 

_ hrtjm Tioorj rtvervww, 

1 BR, 20x30 Llv/dto, extras 
201-O4-2B19 


Big Ba^ain on the Hudson! 
mmm-.wvm-vn 




1771 


FAJRflELD-Dogwood Green 

Lot 3 BR, 2 Mil nxxto, arth ttfts, fplt 


-GILFORD CONDO 

than 


Escape to flit 

trSTNYC Beau (I 


& swim la La 
on 1 10 iCTa of dnndo'^w^BF? I 

I, WhQ 2 lM| 
— movma. sj 


GRNWCH CONDfrTd 
vu, ccm a/c, 2 cbl Bfl 
ous LRdln, waw irali 

WPlHi 


. RIDGEFIELD-Excel commuto. 


STAMFORD-1 bedim condo, excel loca- 

wl? nifi^i3hSorm-7w ,er 


WILTS N-Qandonilnlum for ule by 
owner. 2 twins, q£, w/w o^hig, all 
to 


ubuIiics. Owner will 

qualbUYar.sg^wr 


BtterSecSaas 


1781 


BOSTON pwmsra i txtm In small well 
■n*m* re wbtlctwdeas. Sean. 
New dtK0r t vwvBjHY6T7 2666155 . 


11STW.-PJ.3 
ro^^Idwai 


•' upijtte induSd 


NOFEE 


t«ST E 

»« 


2 nd. Ur-M 


^fafares&Onr 


__W5L 



LSSAtsoc '243 * 725 






__r- •V.V-JiWA i 


E5v«rideDr,2) 
im 


VILLAGE 


WEA GREATS 




j 


WEST. 


wnmns 


:rt*- 


Prettse-TenrJpb. 


9St£Penthse. 

„ 

7-6567 


57 ST ACROSS : 
• HAU 


CnasdG. 



isr^iisEAsr 


-ST, Mi 

LGE STUD 




SeeSupt orCc 



56th St, 400 1 
2 JSi flr, ■ 
'Hat. md 
nmjs 


V-'a»" 


73SL?t 

See 


PraftsmiJtetei 


57 ST-rti m.i 

^■aoo wH 



779«B 
dnw . Ideal 

COLI 


1' 

& 




. FORE ST MILLS. F 


-.,T .sajjfc; 


ItoteMn^ 


BEDFORD 
beaut Mn 
S1KL Cad 


20'sEAST 


3 FULL BED 


New lux M rise, up din area, _ 
Gramercy f% value, no tee, Imm, S655 


JJ. SOPHER & CO. $79-5349 


50’sE. 


Sutton PI 


Huge Z 3 a 4 bednn spites with Formal 
din rm, bpIH-tn washer a dryer, aep 
service ertrance, sane wTmaid's rm. 

Exausirewitn 

J.L SOPHER & CO. 421-4835 

OPEN DAILY UNTIL 8 PM 


60’s EASTSIDE 

3 FULL BR $640 

Imm ace. Ha M-rise, value, no fee 

J. I. SOPHS? & CO. 421-4835 

dPEN DAILY UNTIL 8PM 


70S E LUX BLDG NOFS 

3BRRivVu$825 . 

Ls terr over rfeer. wind Utiflool 

CoFcoran-Simone 355-1200 


70’sE No Fee $lj089 
3 Full BR +3 Full bths+ 2terr 


jb ohmSji 

iFteJncnmpai 


PwAm 


'80'sE LUX HI BSE 

Big 3 BR+DIN 


$735 AND NOFEE 


Rex 4br|825 


JJ, SOPHER & CO. 421-4835 

OPEN DAILY UNTIL BPM 




395-8375: 554-8643 


9ffs near FIFTH AVENUE 

SpKfaus tnMimamn baths lac- 


mi 


CONCOURSE a VIC 

NEW Hi 

™ DG SS3S CWiC ' 

J549TOffN£t(DA 


.. r, 


jsi- 

.Roams. 

a Poems . 
990 ANDERSON AV 
3 Rooms... 
SEESUPT 


CONCOURSE VIC- 

tromsUV. Bev. h 
1970 Walton Ave 


CO-OP QTY.3BS 
mo. low ttotr, ns 
cond. 671-391/. 


FORDHAM RD^ 


td. Bunt art, 
i. Gd si 
ClM-6102 




GRAND CONCOU 
dous. tux dev bl- 


lecuro. Mod ma 
GAEInd S19Q.LU 



GRAND CONC^IK 


NOFEE:.. 4Rn 
Sort Prom or Wk 


■ i .--“-ii 
fat! -?*5 


MORRIS AVE 243 
rms *175; lft rr 
tamed pm Etov. 


NORTH BX-6 m» 

r^cuurten^ 


BR 


North East Brero 
& BwXa AW.3&- 


Ids- Cflnvw all t 
4 security, ns 
325-5770,9 AM to 



■ + - h 


1 - 
MODERN! 


CHE 




EXCELLENT MA 

2015 SL • 

FRt ^ 

X-lge Studio, 2 ' 

W1THSLS ; 

1BS)ROOM. ; - 

WITHDl 

MORB'- 

IMMEDIATE a F 


- ' -j 'j. 




DIRECTIONS: IR 
ham Bav Part 

WB 

Av.ttA! 

sasuPTt 
7 DAY! 

WKDY5 CALL-9- - 
Sorry, No 




1 


PELHAM- - 

12 Story E . 

jsgjiti, 7 

FRBEGA&.M/ > 
GARAGED 
NR. ALL TRA . 

OPEN M 
CALL 824-84' 


. -*LJ 

■ 


PELHAM BAY AS 

Iro rms, mod. bvI 
5om 823-7957 


PELHAM PKY/7. 

SPECIAL FEE! 

.SOME API 
APTS.. 
ajR4. 
2a3BEDmOM5 
M«jin New Garoe 

SILVERMAN 

744 Astor AnuBx 


HF 





BUILDINGS I 
MARXMAN RE/ 


SSS9UUS 


Prtw m/Mr Safi 

RtOTtl A 53U1T8. 931 . 


PELHAM PKWY - 


ROCHAMBE/ 

MoMv Pts««y i 
as.no 
suer 


frwcas.no tec. Sh 


5QUNDVICW V»C 


CAF 



[ 


820Ther 



_ Nea r story Ave ; . ' 
Shoorino Ceofern 


.2 BDRM APTS ; V. 
3 BDRM APTS.: ‘ 
ELECTRIC &' 

fiBUM-V 




TOWNSNDdr. 

NOFEE * 


Jtets.faa.-nwn 


AVE^ 


Coat'd oof o- 












1668 f 


riw* t?- 



J^UML-Bnofahn 


SHEfPWEAD BAY . BELT. 


fefe. Britt- fern 1612 I Apts. Brin. 


W& 

•m ***&■ 





RACES OVERLOOK- 
ING THE HUDSON :. 
' > CONCIERGE ' 

. V HOUR DOORMAN 
i SAFE 

. , -■'EE-UNH) STREETS 
*" ^ALTHCLUB 

Tcwtury* : 

:. icPool 

iGQUET-CLUB 
. _ 5 CENTURY* 

IT Courts 

•Ship Plan 


^12) 796-2600 

- NOONetherlondAve 


SEA CREST 

E9KBXENT MAINTENANCE SRVCE 
3845 SHORE PARKWAY 
3080 VOORH1ES AVE. 

BETWEEN BRAGG & KNAPP STS, 

KNAPP ST. EOT #9 
OFF BEIT PARKWAY 
EXCELLENT SCHOOLS ‘ 
inSha o psh eo dBoy 
ONE BLOCK FROM 
DEAUVILLE TENNIS CLUB 

MANY APTS WITH 

SPECTACULAR VIEWS 
OF SHEEPSHEAD BAY 

SWIMMING POOL AVAIL 

MODERN KITCHENS ' 

WITH EYE-LEVEL STOVES 

1 510010 1 ^™^ 
olUUKJb, 2n Rms $225 JlBR.,-. 5226 MO 


NEWPORT 

13-11 NEWPORT AVE, 

ittrQU'ninl niCM IBtwm 128lhA IMSfi 

StudioUSR™ ....$190-210 
Lovely 3»Rrn^... Fr 275.0 0 1Bedroom $245 


Apt5.8rin.-QBeos 


FLUSHING NEW1B-STORY 

SPACIOUS SUITES 
SUPaaoa MANAGEMENT 
OUTSTANDING SECURITY 


Lovely 3)4 Rm Apt... Fr 275.00 
also 

FURNISHED APTS AVAILABLE 

a^nimn 


ARVEWE-FAR ROCKAWAY VIC. 

OCEANFRONT 
LIVING * 

FOR LESS 

LIMITED TIME ONLY! 
SPECIAL 1 MONTH- 
RENT FREE 

FOR EACH LEASE YEAR* ' 

:S3gA ST** 
■:S®gSS* 


2 Bedrooms, 1 bih $295 

imnwiittiFirfure Occupancy 

See Supt or Coll 634-7291 

Or Cal! 






FOP Hllh/Km GdiK-Opp C«wt House 

ELEGANCE AT A RENTAL 
YOU CAN AFFORD!- 




FREE GAS 

Lovely Studio Apt ....$240.00 
3 Room 



SMa. 

N Street exit. Proceed on | 


m . 

■* r - 


:3t«er • 

****** ■ 
• * 

taUv- - . 

'=7 " . 

Iti,. ... 


3**^- 

f*fcr >-• . 


.... 

tr. ' 

•' ;::s • 

• 

Wfe 

r% t— 
pV&r- ••• 

‘f £ : v ■ ' 




M.Bus 
■ AGENT 

. \M HMffiHENT COMPA- 


ELECTRIC & GAS! 


“ ULtllf 

AM REALTY H07 E If OOngiHwvl 
AVE T& NOSTRAND AVE 

. LAWRENCE GARDENS ,«JE5 Aai * 0(:EAN 

““Sr* linEXns. 

Spo43S*RmApt $299.00 2BDRMAPTS. •* 

.TEL 645-6144 3BDRMAPTS. 

OWNER MGMT NOREWTALFEE 4A5WTPMAPTC 4 
‘ AVET 4 NOSTRAND AVE B^**V^i* rnunL,™ 

IKH L !g ««TR B ,D^ Ms is 

j.00 TOWNHO OSEAPTS. 


OCEAN PARKWAY’S LUXURY BLDG 

OCEAN TERRACE 


24 HOUR DOORMAN SERVICE 

Attr Studio Apt st$240.00 

IBdjmOinRm Ap4 ...$32550 
2650 OCEAN PARKWAY 

NOREWTALFEE OWNER MGUCT 

i 



FULLY RENTS) 

1 BEDROOM $245 

WITH DIN IMG FOYER 

(Avoilobie Sept. lil| 

Jr. 4 ROOMS $285 

FULLY RENTED! 

2 BDRMS, 2 STHS ..$360-5375 

Prtvele terrace, separyt* dining room 

(Available Sept. 1st) 

3BDRMS.2BTHS .. $350-390 

w/dln area; sene with uvt terrace 

[Available Sept. 1st) 

GARAGE SPACE AVAILABLE 

-WM 1 - 

RENTING OFFICE 
3080 VOORHIES AVE 
1 See Agent on Premises 7 days 

cr all 934-81®) or TVI 17741 
* IF NO ANSWER CALL 
UnC0YS9-SPJA.6SMMa 

SHEEPSHEAD BAY NO FEE 

3235 Emmons Avenue 
2815 Coyle Street 


2BR .'$266 MO. 

3BR $306 MO. 

Qualified Applicants onty . 

GAS & ELECTRIC INCL 

-*n»Y be wilhifcawn without iwlta 




2 Rms, 1229 

is *239. ALSO AVAILABLE 

UNBEATABLE VALUES ON 
JR3&1 BEDRMAPTS 

FREEAIIWOND'R FREE-GAS 


41-40 UNION ST 

, AT SANFORD AVENUE 

T BLOCK EAST OF KISSENA BLVD 

Walcto FWi'g IRT &LIRR 
ELEGANT 

1 Bedrm Apis $325 

Rex 2 Bedrm Apt $435 

2 Bedrm, 2 Both, Terr .... $465 

FEATURING: 2*-Hoyr I 
sewed Gardens, Cirqi 


It: 


l BncA to Subway Lauaory Room. Carpeted CeniOdn, 

COOfl CttS^W^rrfa 

\//7 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 

Y“- * Rest's Ofc Open Daily h Sun 10*m-6pm 

ILSO AVAILABLE CALL 961-1200 

/ALUES CM OWNER MANAGEMENT 

RM APTS Gbiwood Management Corp 


150 CHOICE APIS 

IMMEDIATE 

CLEARANCE! 


Low. Low Rents 


“Your Assurance oi Excellence" 


W JUSTlf Ml MUTES TO luSSf* 5 NEWBL °“ N0,i£E 

81-1 145 Av 651-1234 T H T I 

ELMHURST ft Bln* to Subway 1/ H J 


VILLAGE i Beta, m 


i eu 

■ {212)945^060,10-5 

ASTORIA^ RAND NEW 

PREVIEW SPECIALS 


BRIDGEVIEW III 


FREE 

Wall-to-Wair 


Specious 4 Bdrms, 24 Fir 
Magnificent views, $795 


foresYkills 'I 



OCEAN AVE 8> PARKSIDE 

$228 I ftBgaaaaMgagMB^ . 

OCEAN AVE-Loe 2'h m apt In mod 

&&2%g{ ^ , " u ”. 





EACH YEAR for 
. ALSOD1 
TOWNHO 


TOWNHOOSfc APTS. 

NEPTUNE AVE & W. 36 ST. 

OfflCB 0MT7 Day* a Weak 10 to6 

1212)946-6070 


m* 

-■ 


- . , .i» v 

HflMLL 

- n . • * 

1 Henry Hudsooftway 
” MwiB2njk3»kl 

•’ IWOftWflRAPTS 
;'PRbf.OFRC2S 
• *- 

. • Rbbni.Saes ’T/.. 

_ ound Fun, Swimming 
i Social Club . 

115 Square Blacks/. 

-• OUR CONCIERGE 
US DOORMAN 

URALAIR^OND 

JI4&JJJ.S.141 . 

SENT OR CONCIERGE 

[212)796-3333 

AMPION MANAGEMENT , 


-Tent RlwrvujSlJatM 

dew 11 



AVEZ. - <OR WEST 2nd ST 

i- BEACH HAVEN 

dBBnmr 

Studio Apt ........ Fr$ 175.00 

l BdrmAjrt ; >.Fr$225.00 

Lovely 41/2Rm Apt .Fr$270.00 

Ban, i 

2611 West 2nd St 
0*8891-1003 

I NEVERAFEE OWNER AHVAIT 

AVE 2 577 COR WEST 3RD ST 





mmm 


mmm 







iSq 

3TiTrr l »V.;rT.-'«l'J-K,,il 




41 90 Bedford Avenue 

2% (studio, t/c) . . ....... .ST7S Gas 

See Sum. on Premises 


5HEEPSHEAD BAY NO FEE 

3232 Shore Parkway 

4 12 btfrm, terr, a/c) w . . . *27BGas 
See 5upI. no Rronises 




9 SHORE PARKWAY 1 FARE ZONE 

_ THE SOUTHAMPTON 

OVERLOOKING NY HARBOR 

-SZ45 FREE GAS 24 HOUR DOORMAN 

Lovely 1 Bdrm Apt 4 . St$275.00 

9 AGENTlCTSHp^RKWAY 
f OWNER MGMr NO RENTAL FEE 

. SHORE PARKWAY J FARE ZONE 


CRESCENT TOWERS 

N .°.^ 

-"'“’V 

SeeftffOnPtenor7S2-47M;7*l-aiH 1 
WTOR/A NO FEE 

Ki . *245 Gas 

Ism dinette, tor, new stove, a/el i 
Better life Renting corp. 
NEVER A FEE! 

97-77 Quean Btvd. 

lND-63d Drive Station 


INMMDrfve Station Bwayl.No rental reE. 

1212)275-0900 a 3 ® 5 ®* 

— — 83-37 STJAMES AVE 

’ 1 Bedrocxn, $275 

Studios & 1 Bdrm Apts. NOFEE fOwneri seeSiatprem 

NO FEE, FREE GAS. GARAGE AVAIL. EU® URST .'T 7. .”'. '."“i .'.NO FEE 


FREE ELECTRIC & GAS VVUH-IU- YYU1I 

STUDIO APT $199.61 

2 BEDRM APT $315 Mire ^ V *T. W,M1 ^. 

S; BSt ' — glKSMUS 

THE JAMES HOUSE 

86-45 St. Jomes Ave. i 


tercctl nrtxrzxit b 

rm. Some wlrntm... 

walk to subway. Fantastic sfeeptno. 

Unusually lge& Beautiful 
& IMMACULATELY clean 

APT 5D Studio, terr $239 

APT 1A1 Bedrm $255 

APT 5A1 Bedrm $278 

APT 4L 2 Bedrm $336 

Luxurious Living In All 
BRIARWOOD PROPERTIES 
1 37-77 45th Avenue & 

1 36-35 Maple Avenue 

Ooen EvtrvttoH V^CtotMl Thun' 
FLUSHING NO FEE 

LUXURY BLDGS 


ELMHURST HO FEE W15AI 

FREE GAS & ELECTRIC APT 4L 2 
3 c bItter’ufe rEmtingcorp? 38 Luxu 

briarv 

IND^id Drive Strtlon 107: 

1212) 275-0900 r* 

EL7MIURST iai ._ . 63M900 

Imn^'^^fffetAve H&B 

lu: 


.CLOSEOUT 
Park Lane 

LuxlirMu* 31 Storv Hl-PIse 
Forest Hilts Gardens t 
Kew Gardens Estates area 

The Finest Location In Queens! 

LAST FEW! 

2 Bedrm, 2 Bath 

(Wrm TERRACE) 

f r $490* 

WAITING L15T FOR 
, STU DIO & ONE BEDRM 
'■net based on asm allowance 

Free Gas & Electric 


ONE BDRM fi 

JR 2 BDRM fi 

(TERRACE) 

r TWO BDRM I 

— a BATHS. TERRACE) 

'no fee THREE BDRM .......A 

<2 BATHS, TERRACE) 



. ASTOR1A-6V5RMS 

g^^^Aduthm.Iy.SISD. 


3354000 





DISTINCTIVE LUXURY BLOG 

PARK TOWERS 


IER MGMT NOREWTALFEE BAYSIDEAr 

OVEwl^ffi^HARBOR SS*l»i?»S 


BAYSIDE Area-lg Walnut Pnld 

art 2h20.etfrdencr ; 1st fir w/seo kit 
area. Control wm trie hnl i gas. Be- 
aut. tee I, area. Dead end it. Adutn 


ELMHURST-6H RMS 

adults only. *250. 592-5161/ 


3 Bdtm # 2MiTerr _ $499JK) ggg 00 

own < ^°^e r ^ e fee 


U HOUR DOORMAN ( gref; days ^6-0757; ewi/wfcrids ELMHURST, <1-26G»eaney 



STUYVESAHT HTS Historic District or call Agent. Ha 

wafiarwbura-152 S 8 St 

3l 4»7 rm ants lor rent. Call super, BAYSIDE j 
r^rmsf 

Apfs.fin.-StatBikfaBd 1609 

M U 8AYSIDE-B- 


K5^AVE^0F W ? ARDeNAPTS & 39ti 1 g im acts 

SS^^SSS nl1,n 

_.gaUAaent. Mr. Gordon ‘777-WOO ELNIHURST-S ta rms 2 tarn house, lux 

AYSH5E-4V4 rm garden apartment, bttwm 1 kitdj. S35D Ind G4E wtttmvt 

sjdenhat area, ^egrateu, ample Hec*325uCall az«-i6B9 

ELMHURST 44-15 74 St. T* rms new 2 

4Z»»47, 1516) 486-1160 tSn, A. beaut toe nr all trana, 15 mill 

AYS IDE JEFFREY GARDENS ManhTairprts *285.478-2428 . 

2 l 57 t PlJtt F ^ 0M ^AA wm, EU6HURST-4 to, 2 fam house, it j 

BAYSIDE-BAY TERRACE far rockaway I 


3 rm art. SIBO mo. Oean ouiel house 
See Sum Art 4A 


9 garden apartment. 

bESRsT "* 


pefUng.J-2 pmons. Osc me. 

428-2547; tsiai 486-4160 
BAYSIDE JEFFREY GARDENS 
3Mr mo FROM *225 
4MJ215tti Place ’ BA 5-0600 


ELMHURST-5 to rms 2 tarn house, lux 
OthrmJL kitth.iia ind G8£ wrtmut i 
Hec *32Su Call 434-46B9 


SH0RE HAVEN 

.UtmsCAPEO GROUNDS 


VANDOJVEER ESTATES-- 
330VFOSTBJAVE 

CORNER OF NEW YORK AVE 




PREMISES . 
-GARAGE ON PREMISES 

1 Bdrm Apt ;...;...St$^5.00 
Lowly 2 Mm Apt.... $269.90 

EXIT Say PARKWAY 
EVEN?tS§BY APPTONLY' . 

2064 Cropsay Ave ES 3-91 83 

OWNER MGMT ■ NOREWTALFEE 

~ 232-9218 

BAY RIDGE NOFEE 

. . 7420 Ridge fflvd. 




APARTMENTS 
RENT FREE 


FREE GAS & ELEC 


. - ONE FARE ZONE . 


FLATBUSH 

-2100 Beek man Place 




m*T: 

l' 




SKAHAN 796-2222 
OPEN 7 DAYS 


260i J45D 

KwmSwim - ' I 
IY NEW LISTINGS. 

LARLOW 796-7550 i 

NEST NEWHI-RJSE j 

.INCLUDES 

CTRJC&GAS 

^Rtwc Views, Terrace* I 




J88 Bay 38th Sheet 

• - JOS jUPi. OH ra anno 


... SW1MMINGPOOL 

Lovely Studio Apt $240.00 

Attrl Bdrm Apt.... fir $270.00 
2Bdrm3hTerr....,$397.D 

RATBtSH NO FE 

FREE GAS & ELECTRIC 
2401 Nostrand Avenue " 

atiepbdmi) . K . a 

2425 Noshond Avenue 

^^^ 0 Hodr*dAve.S« 


PARK SLOPE 


TRS4 66 St. nr 20th AV 


\ FLATBUSH 


2BDRMAPTS. 



jlMPBOL SE^Sn 



-V 

w - »* 


i*4*g‘£& la * aaAn 

— ''‘Ti- sag 

T<DsSHyjS5oBwy 

Wot®:, r.'-‘ 

^Jfc^Rrvep 
rtjSAtvZb*; .: . 



ts ma, mo ai Wdi * 
£nrkarap&wiop*a. 


BJO.YN COUrUNGS HWY-6HPSHD 

■ NO FEE TO YOU 


. The Realty Store 

-252-31 Tl. 

3000 Aw K far Nostrand) Open 7 Days 
c fifr mna^ug- 

_ '■ BROOKLYN HEIGHTS ■ , 

StodW.efcv, sunny, w/G*£ .. % ...SZ& 

. ; SaNK^* 624 - 70 o 6 ’ : 

TMaaonfaguePty 9M*t Vtwnd* 1V4 
.iu-YNH^S VICINITY ■ - . 


FLATBUSH LUXURY BLDG 

2»nastwBowrt«A/C . JMo. 
FnteGt* Sarteccamncy 

; 557E21 STREET. 

RLATBUSHAREA ^ 

. BETTER APARTMENTS 

: RENT RITE: 

1221 Fbtbush Avenue 
693-8000 • 

FLATBUSH-119E19St . 

RKOtl rangdeMdi* Ufa, 3 plod 


SlSUPt BU4-l\ 

RATBUSH 



"isft 1 i,) 8AYSJDE-BAY TERRACE 

eatniklt.*27SupDwner/Mtfyffi-a300 tennis, swi mming. 225-5957 

■ ■ _ , . . _ BAYSIDE 6 rms, 3lam 

mvim^-swmi mi a^te®ia!g i ws{ 

AUSTIN PLACE SILVER LAKE artM.m-WW 

BAYSIDE-COUNTRY VILL 

NEW DORP NO FEE 

STATEN ISLAND'S 
FASTEST RENTING 
APARTMENTS 

Low Rents! 

, Tremendous 314 $195.60 

Luxurious 4 $210^0 

Deluxe 416 $230.60 

FREE* 

AIR-COND- GAS PARKING 

bSSSSK 

TflENEW- 

TYSENS PARK 

Mill feE? A » rtn * rt5 ^ A,: oau«- 

aE ^&,7D W ,1BiPM aa8 ] 

NEW SPRING VI LLE DnSSf" 


THE MURRAY HILL ; 

144-90 41st Avenue 

ROOSEVELT HOUSE 

1 434)8 Roosevelt Avenue 

THE 

/SEAWANE/ 

142-41 4 1st Avenue • 

THE TRAFALGAR 

42-52 Union Street 

OWNER/ MGMT MJPT5 ON PREM 


OWNER/ MGMT 
1 ,are FLUSHING 


FAR ROCKAWAY 



FLATBUSH 


ffi 1 ? 




awgn.-V; 

*' • Sn&AVEt^' 
SSSfeSSS? 1 

- 3-549.9211 

J 0(aC5T75D . 

*J3Mrier' 

ymsmm 

.■aawaa* 

- *TONPM?Mtxra.. vl 



RATBU5H.611E.21ST 

TVb3V;&jVhn^rtme^esGas/ 
FLATBUSH u#r Cftucfi AxeSUttonj 

' .1 & 3flEDROOMAPT5 , . 

45 TENNIS COURT SuptPrawHes 


{MS-worlhroiBh . 
RMSrwo. .bostihirlf Ifcr4 


SHEEPSHEAD BAY AVENUE Z , 

ONEOLOCKTO SUBWAY 

ATLANTIC, 

TOWERS 

EXCELLENT MAINTENANCE SRVCE 

1237 AVE. Z . 

SWIMMING POOL wall . 

FREE GAS-No Rental Feol . 

Studi05,2y5Rms $210 

■ wmt SLEEPING AUOVE 

; IBetfroom ...$240-250 

X-bel Bedroom ... $290^325 

•ttb DINING RM, LARGE KITCHEN 

4 ROOMS -.$340 

MOTH WINDOWED EAT-IN KITCHEN, 



BEECHHUR5T LUX BLDG 

CRYDER’S POINT ■ 

1*2-41 POWELLS COVE BLVD 

4)4 ROOM APT 

..Exoreu Bus .to Ma nh at door 
. JhoooIng/sEhotris Nearby 

..Prtvata Swtm Pool 
-Private Beach _ 


■ivateBeach 

‘SsaagButasa 1 


LOWER 

RENTS 

LARGER 

ROOMS 

WaveCrest 

Gardens 

204)2 SEAGIRT BLVD. 

AT BEACH 2D STREET 

FREE 

ELECTRIC & GAS 

STUDfO APTS. $169 

1BR APTS $209-224 
2 BR APTS $254-274 

HGHTAT7HE • 
BEACH 8, OCEAN 

"fsmmm 10 

ONE FARE ZONE 

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10TO & 

(212)327-2200 


FREE CASK ELECTRIC 
Presera and tuture oauganev 
See Mrv Crane, Renting office 
HW-fiO Queers Bivd, Comer 
Yellowstone Btvu. Ouen i Days 


INCREDIBLE parkertowers 

HERITAGE 

2)6 BLOCKS TO SUBWAY First m wSiiawntv 

IN THE EXCLU3VE eSmutMAwlnrmW set 

80WNE PARK AREA pr^m E OTdtutwelSmImw 

QUI ^^EAR^^ING T,AI ' 

New. S|?^FcSdWdK with P ^H^ B aK2l9SLi2SSrf 
many hixwSus extras. Large lens P ARMAN CO, BWs ^w ner-mgmt 

DELUXE STUDIO $249 forest hills luxui 

. i behoom $309 ia SJF TOWERS 

2 BEDROOM CONV .... $369 ZZ. 

HERITAGE APARTMENTS 

(owner-management) 100 FI la Exorc^ Subway Station 

I 143-37 38th Ave..Flushing JR.3 & 3)6 ROOMS 
°" ^®£S£rifedf7fK7 B,vd 5)412/3 Bedrms^ Boths} 

445-1135 No Rental Fees 


445-1135 No Reptal Fees 

FLUSHING 1 FARE ZONE y 38- ^ • — 

DISTINCTIVE LUXURY BLDG FOREST HILLS . 

• THE ESSEX 

143-11 BARCLAY AVE , ‘ rSc 

FREE ELECTRIC Z BCUK '' 

Attr Studio Apt $210.00 coNVENt^fi 

lovely 31/2 RmApt !Fr$245.1Q 

__ AGENT 10-11 BARCLAY AVE FOREST HILLS 

OWNER MGMT NO RENTAL FEE LAKEV1EW I 
FUBHING LUXURY ELEVBU7G o^Bffmartsai 

THE -WILSH IRE Short walks 
144-25 ROOSEVELT AVE Uat,sr *“ ttlRC 

NO FEES 

2 &3 ROOMS — $190-$235 

SUPT PREM, 762-585D or 445-1470 
FLUSHING MOD ELEV BLDG FC»EST HILLS 

SANFORD EAST JHSM 

143-33 SANFORD AVE 

NO FEES «4i» 

2&3RmApts — $I85-$235 ^ 

SUPT PREM, 762-0*16 or U5-l/7tl I ffiSӣ S S 


tnaiKdiateG Future Occupancy 

NO RENTAL FEE 

BO 8-3500 LANERLTY 

FOREST HILLS 6-STORY ELEV i 

AERO APART MENTS 

63-61 Yellowstone Blvd 
2 BEDROOM APT5 

__ GARAGE AVAILABLE 

C0 «rsr Y r 

FOREST HILLS MOST DESIRABLE 

LAKEV1EW GARDEN APTS 

One Bdrm arts available Immediately 

Short walk sub— FREE G/E 

noth ST& 66th ROAD TW 7-7112 , 


NEW LUXY BLDG 


FAR ROCKAWAY 


ON THE 
BEACH' 


He 


• . *3BBRJgiig&$Sr 

Ttwat. Sytroa* THE ENVOY. 

STUDIOS Fr $1 85 Mo. 137-05 frakkun ave 

)■ £gS£ iTSSKSKf 

3 BR Fr $320 Mo. flushing 4HD parsons bu 

3 ROOM APT AVAILABLE 


GAS & ELECTRIC INCL 

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 


CONVSnd $EDROOM or DEM 

2Bdrms ( 2Bths . '..:$375-395 


KS3TO3! 

riteflwrfg 6a*-6M< ~| nTrni 


mrtoncretL' I 


BKLVNHTMmfir-ihn' 


j)5' crf!.ra ud 


od tttjAbOvgD wtrlnc. Sai t FLATBUSH^ mtK2BJLS«tt«t Ba)- 
i USr rrttrenas, cony. Elevator mSTqh JIX 


. SPECIAL SAVINGS 

IA8GEJL 4 ROOMS (LOBBY) 
$275-285 


CALL 297-7259 

... FOREST HILLS 


W2MSIS7. 

'rSSSMSS 


mANDS 

state Av.239tfi St. 


ItlStU iM IB 
BKLYN HGHTS & V 

: 8r&n&f 

^YN.HTSw-Pran 


or catt 42*4m l Alan d-12. Mai thru Rt, 8564KB' 


ATBUSH. 1 
AT imod'ra 




ter.wrewrvf 


AVE (br NY 
«. JndMrt- 


•494040 

V FUTURE G 


Jsf 

.*£? /!** 


h-t-fS > 

m- 


FLATB E 22 W_nr Ditmu. ewytnft 
spac nn> nnov s rm *2554 ras SZ25 
Smt 8U4-7178 ’ 

g^aaa 


■WF» 



4430 Dowlostort ftwy ’ 

(OFF NORTHERN BLVD) 

2 K r 3 H,Jr. 4 # 
4 ] A & 5!4 Rms. 


416 & s \ 

i ■ disSawe ™ 


TOWERS 


323Be*cti32ndSt,FirRdClawy ' 

• (212)327-5500 

Ren hOfftc eQpen Evenly, 1G5 
wm&AMnigarnem: _ 
ajxaa, iw.jefgMBftL&ongPres. 

B313MB 

FLUSHING WALK SUBWAY 

42-55 COLDB4 STREET 

MODERN HMDS BUILDING 

1&2 BEDROOM APTS 

CALL 939-3478 crZm»U5 


No Fee 886-2423/3433504 

FLUSHING IMMED 4 FUTURE OCC 

14340 41st AVE 

3 BLOCK SUBWAY 

216 ROOMS 

PHONE: 53^6663 nr 261-2322 
FLUSHING THE SUMMIT 

13240 Sanford Ave 
316 Rm Apt 

Nafcenrtr ma>.adite.Wwpg886-27S4 

RUSHING LUX EEV BLDG 


FORSTHLS-JR3S225 

blMte GBE,^ bft Ora Blvd 



FLUSHfNGOff Utopia Pkwy 




.71C PARK APR 


a6-R6eAv^Wtee^72-3S 


“ R^wSm’“ FRI 5EMT0R 

3 MA STER T V aN’tE^NA 

1 'LUXWlgLlS L^fflY gWAUrra 

AGENT on PREMISES 
|212) 224-3266 

flEMEmn 


fi sr 4J09-J igi r 
dDs, ran: rtw b 
tr«sit»1tetSK; 


.4kMwdtt,3 DOUGLASTtXNMd 

^**■*138880! 



OwiM 
A3-44KtMna Blvd 
Rustling. . Lux. 


YLIhfETOWl 

IBedrtrfltoF 


wav, Tvaecunty. n 
FLU atlNG-SubleH 
ntLffintoy.wKfnc 
tnc. Immra. Eve* 2 


:AtfH 

[■agftro* 




flushing Vic ill sr. 6 lane ma, 3 
bonus with lift bath,, tarr. pfc, walk 
sufe,nrevgyttdnB77V5872. 
n.USHiNG-ue 3VS & xvs rms. Elav, 

gfmwwH*' 

GWi JJriMf/k NO ttt* 


Placing 
a classified 
ad? Coll 
0X5-3311 
between 
9 A.M. and 
5:30 P.M. 


FREEGARAGE1 

(6 MONTHS) 

FREE TENNIS! 
FREE AIR CONDI 


118-18 UNION TUP1KE | 
(212|263-71jl • | 

FOREST HILLS/KEW GARDENS " ! 

COURT m 

123-33 83rd Ave. 

FREE G&E 

Lge. 1 Bdrm ....$333* 

3 Bdrm $500* 

’Net Rent 

f212]°B&«CO ■ 

FOREST HILLS, fn the HEART of 

Began ce w/out Extravagance 

PARKERTOWERS 

NEVER A F51 

ALWAYS 99% PLUS RENTED 
2+liour uniformed Doorman 
. TVsecwtly 


^2 bdmL 2 ' 'bttLdln<dte,W> 

NEVERAFEE! 

Better Life Renting Corp. 


REST HILLS LUXURY 

LANE TOWERS 

107-40QUEENSBLVD 

Central Almmd-2a Hr. Doorman 
100 FI la Express Subway Station 

JR.3 &3» ROOMS 
556(2/3 Bedrms^ Boffis} 


FOREST HILLS I 

Whitehall Terrace • 

76-26 1 13th Stred .- 

STUDIOS $205 ’J 

No Renting fee 

FREE GAS & AIR-COND i . . 
Ennsi IND SifaNBy, UntunTgkeSla 

SUPT ON PREM BO 1-5254 


FOR HL-REGO PK-BHAR 
NO FEE APTS 

Studio $155. $185 G&E 

1 Bedim $185, $210 G&E' 

2 Bdrms $235, $265 G&E 

IMMEDIATE & FUTURE OCCUR. , 
NR TRANSIT, SHOPS. SCHOOLS* 

SHAFA.LTO 261-5300 

124-23 Queens Blvd. oont 7 davs 1 


FOREST HILLS i vicinity 
KRAHAMAPT.CENTlIc 

1-2-3 MONTHS FREE RENT - 

ON MANY OF OUR APTS 

also 1000 apts-.No FEE!! > 

r PftHAM. 12M0 On* Blvd, LI 4-9004 


mod elev bldg FORE5THIHS subway 

FORD EAST 

SANFORD AVE krahamTSmo on* Ku mom 

JO FEES 63-84 SAWVMRSsVmW O f) 

pfs . - .. $185-5235 ,. T1T ” j” ^yr |fT 

NL 762 -M 16 or 4*5-1/70 NW 5a^ L aff » NTrafi» 

h-ushing no «TORY elev For Hills vic-FIshg-No Fee 

lnemax.MUN 3VS ROOMS, A/C- S22S 

134-25 Franklin Ave Move in now - rent starts^pt.IS 

WALKTD5UBWAY -KRAHAM , MMO OK Blvd. LI 4^004 

coNVEHtlirr TO SHOPPING For Hills-Kew Gdns-Expr subw ■ 

1 &2 BEDROOM APTS a^^sep^nft^e-jWE,, 

CAii- 762-6S18 °r 22 ^ 1 ^ FOR HILLS JiBIkSubw 

FLUSHING -LUXURY ELEV BLDG . Oldr lux aiwibhto.2 full BRflW 

UNCOLN GARDENS ttMag bi^EM ' 
FREE ELECTRIC ' FOREST HILLS 2 Vi $176 

,asg^ggB£aa; 

FOREST HILLS 4Yi $295 

_ CMVnY STONEHl l LL^83Snb l yB^I%5. Blvd. 

™kljnave FOR HLS LUX 3H $270 G & E 

ott Main Street) Modem btda Terrace, axil g, sub. 

DROOMAPT 

pt oh premises FCTl HILLS 2J45200G&E 

4W0PAR5OWSBLVD ssMSSSSSSgkSr 

l APT AVAILABLE FOREST HILLS 4)6 $250 

886-2423/343-8504 sro«iimS^^'i^GnL%vtf . 
immedk future occ FOREST HlliS 316 $220 

■40 41St AVE sttn^maaoJoS' ^^T^wonsBIvd. 



FOREST HL-STUDIO $170 * 

WJBUBIkrU 


FORHLS-REGO$340G&E?L 



FOREST HILLS4rms$285 


NU-PLACE 



FOREST 1ft 4 rms + studio attic, Dvt 
tjaufcMrjQjrtln Av X sta. Adults (art 



Cont'd on Followins Pass 



































- 



*pts.Bafam.-ftggg 1612 Apts. IMaa-ftro 

I KEWGARDEf 

6LEN0MS NOFEE 

SUMMER "THEALUSC 


KEW GARDENS 


‘THE ALLISON" 


"MOVE IN” 

SPECIALS 


81-10 135 STRET 
1 BLOCK FROM QUEENS 
BOULEVARD & SUBWAY 
5TUD10-48 ROOMS 
FROM5174 


1612 m.Mn.-Haa.-SvSt 1614 l^Mm-fcfcteter 1618 ApbAMbekW 

LOWS BEACH NO. YONKERS 

more fun 

LAFAYETTE TERRACE 

. 370 WEST BROADWAY FOR THE 

Studio & 1 Bamioc ‘ . . - k 

ic 2BDRMS,2^BATHS^ MUNfcY! 

Pi WA91IMGTON 5 AVE S MAIN SIS 

DOLPHIN GREEN APTS 


■ GARDEN APTS 
4 Rms, 2 Bdrms 

/.: $202-$235 

' 5Rms,3Bdms 

: $250-$275 

Air Conditioning & 

New Appliances Available • 


ONE MONTH FREE RENT I 

AGENT ON PREMISES NO FEE 


i ; m \ w-. #: w Miy ^ i >ui . i on 


fcrtmris to Store 


FREE CLUB MEMBERSHIP 
or FREE TENNIS PERMIT 


rNVviUJ.'HH 


Li 4-0070 

KEW CARDENS NO FEE 

83 - 19 141 st St. 



STUDIO &1BRAPISl 
FROM $200 MO. 

GAS IN CL IMttED. OCQJP. 


DAY OR NIGHT 

ON OUR TWO 
PROFESSIONAL 
TENNIS COURTS 
At The AH New 
Luxury Hi-ffise 


tprroe.<3^a 

CPW.W*wiU 



WALK TO HR- 
26 MIN. GRAND CENTRAL 


THE .NEUr YOjRK" TIMES. SATURDAY* AUGUST 7, 1976. . -V > . ^£1^1; 

sfer 1618 j flpbJnfanJMM 1638 lS64jfefc.ttto4b»J«5gy XS64)jlptL0^-faifa«y 166*1 Jlph- MulTW siwl 

! BERGENCO. RfVER VIEWS for^LS ^ 

c TENNIS o^pSv 

For a limited Number 

DAY OR NIGHT °L Peopl !r Sf* 1 ? ' 

ON OUR TWO - S e ot Ad ™’ DS8 
PROFESSIONAL ' jT 0 ,., 

lBre | normandy ■ tenniscourts Mediterranean 

At The AH New - T nwpr . CARDWAPIS 1 

Luxury HMfee *^ erS °* 

• I 5EBNG IS BELIEVING , KrIlIrI I Iri .555 NORTH AVE. 

R- I RflirvncnwFw; I JIMHIM I II I FORT LEE, NJ. EAUTWL APIS' 


hO.-* ?*•*• v*;:. 








j; 


GARDS+APTS 




274.Mafisbn/ 
: -.889-5400' 

' LAwaaattfeBOALP 






SESNG 15 BELIEVING 
BRADFORD MEWS 


illll 


-.:7 : -V ’T 
. wW* - "" 


KAUTRJLHaaSE APIS' 




fALLP KfiU 
■PWCMtEi 




lySikfa^^T(?ouga at Warship 


.ivreuBuitoCitv 
. RENTAL o£f?CEq£eN 7 DAYS 

’ 255-55 UNION TURNPIKE 

343-8504 


KEVT GARDENS 

83-36 BEVERLY ROAD 
1 BDRMAFTCL 


„ LUXURY HI-NISE 
GAl NR TRANSP.* SHOPPING 


FREE GAS. NR TRAN5P. & SHOPPI 

SUPT. on PREM 441-0058 


ROSLYN GARDENS 

225WARNB?AVB^UE 



FfilkideAv 





TERRACE 


BURGUhfflY GARDENS 

SOK2BRtraQ45 wawgy 

Jtpts.arin.-HY.arie 1662 


SYOSSET-WOODBURY 


mu 


Jackson Towers 

. 37-50 76TH STREET i 

SMI 


KEW GARDEN HILLS 

ARROWBROOK GARDENS 
1 Bedroom $2094235 
3 Bedroom Available 


36 ROOMS FROM $570 

Jericho Tcfc-Owtg Bav am 721-1700 

Apts. Fora.- Westchester 1617 


NORTH YONKERS 


: Studio Apts $225' 

;1 Bdrm Apts $240 


Renting office In rear of 

135-02 Jewel Avenue STEF 

BO 8-0273 » 

KEW GARDEN Hills GARDEN APTS 

416 Rms-$225 & Up 

5 Rms- $260 Z=. ■ 


STEPPING STONES 


Stuifia IKStxfrmsfr.safiO 
free-h«*L hw, «s. a/c 

PtXJWfEALTH CLU1WUNA 


. Retting Agent Prem or 424-4300 
■JACKSON HTS LUX BLOC. 

- BOSTON PINES TOWERS 
•: FREE SWIMMING POOL 


'ysEsssstur* 

Free Gb 5. Shcooing on Pnm. 


■Renting Otc Ooai Mon-5ni.NR2-S15D 
■JACKSON HEIGHTS NOFE6 

-• FREE GAS & ELECTRIC 

* A MrPl^sfuA= REWn'NOttfftf? 49 
NEVER A FEE I 
97-77 Quem BMI. 

IND-d&p Drive Station 

V {212)275-0900 

JACKSON HEIGHTS AA NOFEE - 

74-02 43rd Avenue tr 

Studios fr $220 - 

i ’ Jr. 3 Rooms S250 4 . 

Jr. 4 Rooms $295 

- See Suoi on PrmliH 
ttCKSONHTS NO FEE 1 BLKSUBW 

Studio 2Vi Vh 5'A 31 

TREE GAS. fAODEBN ELEV BLDG r 

r vi!R-cnNn rARdr.cnru pppm ■? 



Jtpb-lhfn-Westctoter 1618 

BRONX RIVER RD. 125 
GLENDALE GARDENS 
316 RM APTS. 


Overloading Bronx River Porfcwir 
Lwurv BIOb. Parking on Pram nea 


BRONXVILLE VICINITY 

OAK HILL 

iwanJ-wTrrPno 

TBEDRM APTS fr $345 

ITS Colonial Pkvnv. For dfredlom; 
14) 793-3306 <9U) siflfeO 


‘ 1FYOU 
LOVE MANHATTAN, 
BUT ALSO LOVE 
TREES & THE 
HUDSON. ‘ 

NEW LUXURY BLDG. 
ONLY 23 MIN. TO GCS 
PRIVATE ELEVATOR TO 
R.R. STATION BELOW. 
AGENT ON PREMISES 
(914)476-0963 


lets. Fn-im Jersey 1663 

| E. ORANGE % fir bp NYC as or Tm 

, LuxEffncy 8s 1 Bdmrfr $238 

9xdal 2 Bdrm Wx Pntfts j«5 

. 19' COLOR TV & UTILS FREE 

M Hr Bids I Parting Attaint 


250 GORGE ROAD 
CUFFSIDEPARK 
On Top of the Pafeodes 
Ovedajldng N.Y. Skyfme 

EXPRESS N.Y. BUSES AT DOOR 

Also FEATURING FABULOUS 
SWIMMING POOL & 
RECREATIONAL AREA 

CHECK THESE 
FANTASTIC VALUES 

2 BDRM, 2 BATH PLUS 
TERRACE from onjy 


ii&Tisi 

Raoen Towers 


Towers 6C5OJ«uBn20 1-6 


Guttenbera on the Palisades 


Kalttox* Pm (tv Co. Owner/Bullder 
I NORTH YONKERS 


BRONXVILLE VIC BRONX RIVER RD 
APARTMENTS 


LaCosta Club 


459-0062- 

rchmno Hill No. 3 rms 1-A area, snq, 
tree util. >lwi walk E-traln Ons 6iv£ 
PdrXg avail, owner 76&-&7S4 


5ILVERT0WN 





RICHMOND HILL 

i'k med ms. Call bH 4PM. 8454J0S3 


‘ -AIR-COND. GARAGE ON PREM 

SO-15 41st Av/Open 7 Days 


j JACKSON HTS KEWGDNS i 
NO FEE Studio, 3)6 &4K suiumiE 

^»52^ST APT IF <24-9887 Sir shorab 



(212) 275-0900 


APTFINDER'S SERVICE 

IS Luxury Bldgi To Owosc Prom!! Odell Are. Lef 

STUDIOS. S235 1BR_$275 lX 

2BRs(frt] $325 3BRs..$4I5 9)4-969-1056 

Some wtlh Doorman Svc & Pools 
BRONXVILLE Vic 632 Palms Rrf 

3HS285 4i6 5375 516 $415 mw 


1 6 2 BDRM5 fr $3(X). 

DIR: Sew Mill Pfcwv north, exit at 
Tncfcahoe Rfl onlg Rie 9A. norm to 
Odell Are. Left on Odell . Aw to 
N.B’nay. left about 2 miles lo La Costa 
Club. 

914-969-1056 914-968-3700 


^ 71 “ SUNNYSIDE-J Iw ms In pvt house, nr 

6Q-527SST APT IF <24-9887 ell shocpL-JC & transit. 10 mins Manh. 
JACK50N HTS Modem 4'.-S rms, nrlvele SW mtl ofe- EX2-T461. 


rrvT * 


LONGVIEW 


* See the apartments 
that are setting 
a new standard of luxury 
living in the N.Y. area. 

15 minutes from midtown, 

5 minutes from 
Lincoln Tunnel. 

With Health Spa, 
Olympic pool, 
Racquet dub, 

24-hr Concierge, 
On-premises shopping, 

. Cinema, Parking ' 

STUNNING 
DECORATOR MODELS 
OPEN EVERY DAY 
10 'til 7PM,- ‘ 
WEDNESDAYS SUNDAY 
'til 8 PM. 

Coll Mr Robert Jacobs 
(201) 861-7400 or 
(212) 279-7400 

DIRECTIONS: Lincoln Tunnel, 
exit on Boulevard East and 
proceed north 2!6. miles to 
GALAXY. 


HUGE 3 BDRM, SEPARATE 
DINING RM, 2 TERRACES 


1 BDRM SUITES FR $367 

IMMEDIATE 

OCCUPANCY 



BERGEN. NORTH 


COME 

SEE 


new. exoress subway, responsible suNNYSIDE— Ehw bldg. 7 toe rms— 
Mul ls n r bum couple pref. No tee ST6S; 3'.? ip* rms— nos; 4/i Ice rms — 
S760.’4r fee. SHIK 34M585 


JACKSON HTS-3‘^1 Ige rms. decora*- I U.Tcfcej Ken Gdos Hills vie Pleasant 3 
S3: ■SST-, vu, !f?PJ.Z~ 015. Owner /eat I BR dipiex gdn act In [nil conunun. , 


866-1901 or 961 -7083, MQ-cg? ' 

hS£' STB M «!?%» Whitestone 20-25 Parsons Blvd 



IMMEDIATE OCCUPANa 


GALAXY 


ROUND 

HOUSE 


let. Per acor. call 651-1594. 


3N HTV87 St. 3 h ruts. 1st Hr. WDODSIDE 
n. Nr shogg, tram. 426-0915; 


JAMAICA ESTATES LUXURV H1-RI5E 


'SPECIAL 


3.5 1 A-fi rms. Immediate occupancy. 
WDODSIDE NO FEE 

MODSN LUXURY BLDG. 
Free Gas & Fully Air Cond 

Jr 1 (sleeolra alcove) S23S 

Jr 3 (sleeping ale, fern C ia.79 

4 (Jtdrm-.) _*2BS 

4'q I2wnn,2bttutin,terrt . .5371.77 
BETTER LIFE RENTING CORP. 
NEVER A FEE! 

97-77 queens BhnL 
lND4»d Drive Station 

(212) 275-0900 



230 GARTH ROAD 

LUXURY ion. Ffreoroof 

1 BEDROOM. From $320 
3 BEDROOMS, from $595 


A lolnt venhre of Better & 
Partem and the Pnjoenlia! 

Insurance Cornxjrtv cl Amenta 
Builder -Owner Managed 


■ ON THE 
HUDSON! 


MONTCLAI R-fHmd S nrt g arten apt. 
gar Induced Nr tramp. S4J0 me + 


I I || I I ■■■■ I l LJ I I 

ImBBiuti mi t rn.tema^ai 




SEEING IS BEUEVWG 


j 't)n Remaining Choice Apts 

.;„g FANTASTIC 


WOODSIDE 9 rat ns IpManhatl 

63-11 Quems 81v0 163-64 its) 
Bus hi Manhattan at dtrnr 
3 blks Rushing IRT 61 St Expr Sta 


studios (438 sq ft) $240 

75-0900 1 bedi mt (502 sq ft) $275 

? nrins tc Manhattan 2 bedim (798 sq ft) ..... . $370 

fiHSJSS#* 3 bedrm (1700 sq ft) .... $625 

IRT 61 St Eqr Sta Apts also available In White Plains, 

1 Rarlrm WAK New PocmI fe,Mt Klsco & South Nvacfc 


TP I FLEX APARTMENT. S695. 
9 14-723-8474-da 1 1 Y-9 14-948-5800 


'; ■*» Move-Jn-Now-Terms 
i!; (Sff US FOR DETAILS) 


Studio $230;! Bedrm $265 
2 Bedrooms $325 

See Surf B-1J or call 672-7295 


HO FEE 

WESTCRQFT, 119 E. Hertsdale Ave 
(914j 948-58C0 M-F. Sal & Sun 11-5 


I Tarrytown JOO Marti Ing Ave 

CA5TLE HEIGHTS APTS 
PANORAMIC VIEW 

2 Bedrooms, 2 Beths 

Terrace. Dldiwasher. Alr-Cond etc 
. SwImmlTO Pool, Parking. Play Area 
914 ME 1-439* 914-621-7264 


utils. 201-O7-5T36IW and. 

HUDSON TOWERS ON PALISAOE5 

TASTffULLY FURNISHED 
Studio & 1 Bedroom fr.$230 
Parking SlO.Cable TV Avail 

10 Minutes to N.Y.Port Authority 

(212)0X5-2792 (20 1IUH 8-0220 

Apts.Mn.-ln Jersey 1664 


8200 BLVD EAST 

NORTH BERGEN 


BAYONNE UPrOY/N-Nrw 2 tam. 6 Ige 
rms, 2 btm. Mrtc^space. supply uwn 
util, nr all tram, adults cret. no nets. 1 


mo sec, 5290/ mo. Call 201-658-1581 
mv or n tie. 


STUDIO &1 BDRM APTS 
PROF Off ICES 


PILOT 


' ^5-20 WEXFORD TERRACE 

t HE YEAR ROUND 
COUNTRY CLUB 



HasHjigs-On-Hurftun Vic Lux I 
HOP Wartiurton Ave. 


4bR00/4APTV. 
UNBELIEVABLE REDUCTIONS ON 


VALHALLA VICIN ITY ft SCHOOLS 

COiY 5mi Ranch 

WuocttMTiIng lireplace „ 
Landscaped yard. garMe-5425 
Realty Forum 914 237-4200 


FEW REMAIN ING APTS. 

FREE PARKING. FREE GAS ‘ 
SCENIC VIEWS, AGENT ON PREM. 
MTKISCO , 2C0 DIPLOMAT DRIVE 


DIPLOMAT TOWERS 


Spackws aoJ5 in luxury bldg, yeamwnd 
rscreatHr, in/outdoor poof, sabna, rec 


•WHITE PLAINS 

CARLTON DAVIS APIS 

OWNE D R-MANAGED 
AIR-COND ELEV BLDG 

APARTMENTS AVAILABLE 


BERGEN COUNTY FORT LEE VIC 

20 MINUTES FROM 
MID-MANHATTAN 


FREE SWIMMING POOL 
. FABULOUS RIVER VIEWS 
CENTRAL AIR-COND 
24-HOUR DOORMAN 
HUGE TERRACES 


Apt Brim.-Rass.-! 


rm, dose lo shops/ fransp. . 

1 BR fr 5279. 2 BR W\OT fr $329 
914-741-2419 


CARLE PIACE-MINEOLA 


f^APT RESIDENCE 

? Featuring 


FAIRHAVEN GARDEN APARTMENTS 

. 3 ROOMS FROM 5^2 

a 1 '] ROOMS . . FROM 5366 

401 E. Jericho Take 516-CHB-4044 


•tipLYMPIC SIZE INDOOR 

^ SWIM POOL 
I & HEALTH CLUB 

SUPERB 

t U&3 BEDRM APTS 

; tUOST WITH LARGE TERRACE 

1 ]2|Hour Doorman Service 
iCfentral AY Conditioning 
iSecurity Alatm Each Apt 
jt)s-Stte Shopping Center 
jCftO-Site Parking Available 
j® Subway Af Comer 
i Owner Managed 

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCYJjO FEE 
Rental Office Open 7 Dww:3U-5i5i 

: * CAU(21 2)658-2620 

' l JAMAICA ESTATES VIC. 

JAfTOR APTS 



Cedarhrst-Polmer Hse 

aeiggafeMa 

FARMINGDALE 
Lovely area unfurn/fum.Pvt 
hse-hi ranch, LivRM, Din- 
RM,EATin KIT-DEN, 2 BR. Util , 
I ind A/C $450.1/2 mi.to HR. 
Call 516-420-9189 aft 4PM I 


MOUNT VERNON 


RENT NOW! 
SAVE NOW! 
The Saratoga 


HAWTHORNE APTS 


131-159 SMITH STREET . 
(corner South Ocean Avenue) 


3'^J1be*m) 5280 

°i 

WALKTORR ft SHOPPING 
See ivpt* call (5161223-2887 


launuies each 
it. 1 bdrm aval) 


] •" 160-10 89lh Avenue 

J * 1 BLOCK IND SUBWAY _ 

V FneGas No Railing Fees GARDEN 

j LUXURY HI-RISE FIREPROOF 

STUDIOS S210-S240 FftlRHAVEN< 

: 1*BDRM w/wo Ten $260-$275 
1BDRMS, THRACE $345 

; jg-feg 465-1300 GREATNECK 

■:TI“>dP B " Modem 

'V SUSSEX HALL ._,r . 

■ ! ^s ssruito GREi 

j Attr Studio Apt Fr$210.00 V _ 

Spoc 2Bdnn Apt $380.00 TC 

f - SUPT 166«^GHLAND AVE | ^ 

! OWNER MGM^ AAtA NO RENTAL FEE ■ *-' 

2eas 

: WINSTON HALL (lR , . 

j WALK TO SUBWAYS S SHOPS U WOCK 

; ShidioApt Fr$210.00 1&21 

: ' :A % Room Apt . .,,.Ft«10.00 apply pr 


tor future. 

COUNTRY CLUB MANOR 
250 West Merrick Rd 
(516)223-2787 

GARDEN ClTY-MINEOtA 

FAIRHAVEN GARDEN APARTMEK 


' 20-Sfory Hi-Rise 
UNPARALLELED VALUE! 

Save Up To $700 

216 Kitchen ,..$211 

3 Sleeping Ale $234 

3!£ Full 1 Bdnn $250 

4)6 Terrace $281 ! 

51? 2 Bths, Terr $357 

Free tennis. Free Alr-Cntd A gas. Pool 

Rergssffy^ssaT 0 °"- 

40 EAST SIDNEY AVENUE 
914-667-3066 212-459-7412 



FREE 

ELECTRIC & GAS 


NEW ROCHELLE 720-730 Pdlwn 

GREEN DOLPHIN APTS 


RIVERVIEW 


.ON THE HUDSON 

1 11 1 River Rd, Edgewoter 
Featuring Luxurious 

1 Bedroom Suites $415 

,2 Bedrooms (flex) $475 

(1 bed t - sri din er convert 2 nd bed) 

3 Bedrooms (flex) $605 

(2 beda-ses din v conwt M bedl 
STUDIOS ALSO AVAILABLE 

ON SITE PARKING, POOL, 
SAUNAS, GATEMAN, TENNIS 
COURTS,TB®^CES & MORE 
ALL INCLUDED IN RENT 

FANTASTIC VIEWS! 

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 
201-224-5005 

' Renting agent on premises dally & Sun 

! J.I. SOPHER & CO., INC. 


MINUTES TO 
MIDTOWN 


PARK OPPOSITE BUILDING. TENNIS I 
COURTS, BOATING. ICE 5KATING, j 
BICYCLE PATHS. . ' 1 


RENTING OFFICE OPEnSAT.SUH, 
MON ft WHO SHAM to 7PM 
OTHER TIMES BY APPT 

NO FEE (201)8684)100 

AGENT „ 

HAMPTON MANAGEMENT CD. 


BRUNSWICK AREA/Franfclln Tshg 


Manhattan mhr. 677 Matfute 161 St) 
212-C1-4835 


Modem Garden Apts 

GREATNECK 

TERRACE 



BERGEN COUNTY 

Heart of Fort Lee 
Immediate Occupancy 
at the fabulous all-new 




Convenient living 
in lovely Westchester 

Semi-duplex ’style opts 

1 & 2 Bedrms fr 


Prate 21 .Shry Building 

COMPARE! 

Huge 2 Bedrm Apts 
with Full Dining Rm, 

2 Full Baths, Terrace 
$453 

INCLUDES: 

Air Cdnd , FreeTartnto 

Free Parting River Views 

Puol ClutJ Imernber^Up Sauna ft Gym 
12 Acre Pnv Estate 24 Kr Orman 


. AJJODEU 
WITH DINING 


2 EAST Mia DRIVE 


(1 Block Northern Blvd) 

1 & 2 Bedrm Apts 


.’ NORTH WESTCHESTER 

3’^K 416 rms. .modem oerdsiacti, ter- \ 


HASTINGS VIC 


APPLY PREMISES OR 4B7-5512 


i^%^LUxa^ 0HE 
' *, WEXFORD HALL 

■ . ■ 86-75 MIDLAND PARKWAY 

i. Audio Apt. $220.00 

3» Room Apt ; $290.00 

: ICENT 86-75MI DIAND PARKWAY 
^ qSiIrmomt NO RENTAL FEE 
. ■ jOm1CAESTATE5 LUXURY BLDG I 

I J W1LSHIREHALL 

. fi TB 2 J 0 W«t<irdTefrag 

-Jr 4Rm Apt Din area $335 



Garden Duplex 


AND PATIO RANCH APTS 

2&3 BR $284-$395 


tTerroces Avoilabfe) 

FREE 

Gas,Electric,Heat 

25 minutes Grand Centred 
Walk to train, shopping 
* & public transportation 



Rental Office open 7 Devs NMPM 

$75 Easton Avenue • 
(201)846-6767 ’ 


1600 CENTER AVE. 


. , ajmtr Whiteman SL 
Featuring Spacious 


^“MIervice 7 * 7 ^ 


ISStSSJaa* 1 ® 

Woodstock Knoll . 




1 Bedrm Suites $410 ;;$rivatIt6rrac£ 

2 Bedrms (flex) $515 

3 Bednns (flex) $635 ’ 

STUDIOS ALSO AVAILABLE LOVELY 



47 RrverdaJe Ave. 
Cgmcr Praseect St & RtVadale Ave 


914-968-0507. ■ 


Hastings vie 


] WEXFOfra T^R RACl 

AT no RENTAL f 


^ JAMAICA ESTATES VIC. 

, sh XUKUSSSS^ 


1BB»00M$315 

1 black LlRR/ahep. 5T6-HU 2-3912 

fRHF 

2Saruce9 (Sl6)46fr4>S37 


One of A Kind 



YONKERS-75 BRUCE AVE 


.24-hr doorman - 
jndocrpooi 
i Jaundry rm every floor 
.cable TV 

1 Block to Shopping 
& Center of Town 
Most Apts with Terraces. 
PLUSMORE 
20i-461-%20 

Renting agent an premises daily ft Sun 

J.l. SOPHS & CO., INC 


ATTR STUDIO APT 
LOVELY 1BD 

275 Prospect St(201fS76-4378 



RTLEE NBG.W. BRIDGE 

LINWOODPARK ■ 

^^A^gfJ! 75 ] 



«f> BI 

’-2912: SaVSai 


2-Bedrm Garden Townhouse 


with Its own private bads yard & efl- 
“ — wadw-«“-" — “ 
(AC All 


Beautiful Ice rms. i 
S234; 3 rtns ST95, 2 nr 
APPLY SUPT 9 


sa; 


rms Manhattan IrrfB^^Mtpcn (fi) SJ) 




YONKERS, Wrerdafe vie ladim Van BERGEN COUNTY 
Cartlaran Pare. 3 enjming rms. «tev I IRF¥TY RF 
UaWnri, S19a WO tSL C ji'aS, LlotKIT DC 


SEN COUNTY UTTLE FERRY 

LIBSTY BELL VILLAGE 


From $189 

immediate* future rcnsshcv 

Alexander Summer Inc 


-turacnuDle. 



LONG BEACH 

Bicentennial Celebration 
OCEAN TERRACE 
55 MONROE BLVD 
1 & 2 BEDRM APTS 


YONKERS NW-fi r 

MAPLE KNOLL . SS'& a M'| 

441 N. B*WAY - 1914196&4447 jacurtty. (914Wg 

NORTH YWKEK TUDORWOODS TSBg MF It. 

-fflSlBg IfeS,™ 


N. Yotikers-Riv Vu-Subtel 


3rm M flr 
NYtJflY.Y 


Ik RR 24 fflifts 


tias. nofee.SMivta-iw-iaU ! 

YONKERS COUNTRY SETTING 

YONKERS DU NWOODIE 6 RMS 


YONKERS DU NWOOOIE 



L 


Renting Office-411 Pork Place 1 
Comer 

Rt 9W and Unwood Ave 
(201)9442038 or ! 

(201)944-2039 ^ 

Open Mon thru Fri 9 to 5 PM j 
Eves Mon thru fri 6:30 to 8:30 | 
Sat and Sun 1 1 AM to 5 PM 




I ftmlwBi-ExstSfe 


..* • <•*. 


ALL-AMERICAN, i 


jisopfe&co.iNC 

201-944-2900 - . 

FT. LS&VJC. NO FEB 




HOTB.KENMORE 


Secys: Oui;S(pedGi 

AM Bm PahLBLAiR iota 


L.GRAO NEVER A F 
6«ginebmdhicgi,g 
ine Agency 535 5Bm 


LUX HI-RISE 
API SEEffiRS 


EtcOTcTfree tedra 
Doorman. Large T< 



fibre, trfafos & 
aotCwehaveJB 


1 BEDRM FROM $375 

2 BEDRMS FROM $495 

3 BEDRMS FROM $585 

ALSO STUDIOS A VAILAKf- 
Vislf ocr ertilsitieii tMir 


Office Man iota 7. 

NO FEE 201-8^0)00 

WnU***^™* 0 * 0 
THE COMMONS 

^giha^li^ao oj^ ameraBni 
JM, soettered mn * bataario 

Rents fro m $30 0* 
induefing FRS GAS for . 
Hearing &Caddng. - 

(201)661-0400 


JW wjnwiTa ewi wwutr UW3 . 

UMUBAiStU 

S35ftUB.130E.na. - - -• . E!« INFER) HG-EMF 

32 ST-MAOISON AYEpSMWI , • ^Sffi1^T7S 


mrafmP«47Sfu- 32 ST-MAOiSON AYE^E 2-6400 

HOTEL WARRINGTON 

StWGL£S53SOOUBLE5540WKUP 

201-8^0)00 51STJ30EAST 20d&|dAVES 


. . - •f.r': 


^GALTMAKFRtr 

SEXAflacvagSA 


PICKWICK ARMS 


230 Main a. Ft. Let (cwfott 0(0 
Coco 7 davs a i Wert . 
gr can Ms. Cronea Tor elormalioo 


201-461-82)0 

J.l. Sopher & Co. 



FORT LEE 

2077 Center Ave 

LUXURY23-STOSY BLDG 
WITH CIRCULAR DRIVEWAY 


(201)943-7700 

Rcntlod Asent on Premises Daily A Sun 

JJ. SOPHS & CO JNC 


Magnificent Penthouse Suite 




a RCULAR ENTRANCE GALLERY 
4 eEOROO>XS.4 BATHS 
Fcmal anras reetr; breMcras) rtso 


37 ft terrace off bedrms 
40 ft terrace of? Irving - 
room & curing ra«n 

ALL ROOMS ARE OVERSIZED 


7ER. Buses ta N. , 
tw every Smlmaes. No dogs. 


CENTRAL AIR UtiDmOtilNfi. 

POO*- CLUB AND 
INDOOR G* PA jE AVAILABLE 
24 HOUR DCCRZiAN 


$1200 no. Cd! 201-947-5803 

EFFICIENT CY.?i=R- , . , AKAS£ , .‘jKT 
FORT LEE 

PRESIDENTALAFTS 

13K ISta ST- FT. _EE. N J. . 


RENTALS FROM 
1-BR. 1 BR/DEN 2-BRS 
S225 • $255 $270 


- ! NEW LOW RATES- . | 

$39-$41 ,.-‘a 

WE0aV$53459iO ' 1 

bWTH PRIVATE BATH) - SE 

COMPt^ VT cS^lSeRV? CE “ 
BLOCK from Osaaown Subway 
59 ST. E EL 5-32S0 BET MAD ft PARK * 

HOTS. NASSAU ' fil 

tRibni- Vest Side 1902 

Mb ST W. UnwtMl badwtar Wtari SE 
ta Cnehea bnwnstane. a mu, pvt, 
n«LCtn»409aMB41. If 

43rd a; Wear at bmv - hnooo JJ 

HOTEL DIXIE . I 

: ! 

ALLWttti glanrirTv Gl 

ALLPnvne Baths ft RjuSb 

wish snsar .. - 

Weekly.fr $56 fo. $84 ^ 

43RDST&8THAVE .7 

.senior ernz^s . = 

SngfeRooms4120Montti- • 

m 

75 ST, 166 ML . TR MOW ?? 


.V. mLAGEt . 

4gah<Vfc4fad5t- 

rmft SSSW ; " 

■ FORTUNE aoeanrSB: 


■j 


MAHONY'N»VMk 
AHONY Aflency.n Ji 


HBSSSRSSSI 

354-9300 Itarttea 




366 MADISON * 


... ,.}k ....... 

T - "- 


TAFTaggnev S 

«5^*! 

1 in. Banking. RJ 


Briefs, lestaad lit 


..T3WmenSLHrC|ai- 


FlffiE Heat, Hat Water. Cooking Gas, 
A/CPvfcing. ' _ 


i Hi rise, iravirva; nn AC. srasiw 
1 nul! ar c remises. V kJt-l.s & Jt! 


houses ct warsna. ouses ta . , J*ru“- ar 
en r , sarim cic?. A!l urita ird. w.-w 
carnetms. 


PhooeH20 1)727-2040 
or(201)727-2041 

OLD BRIDGE RT 9 

PARKWOOD VILLAGE < 







DM«RS-C 

KlCMRffi' 


S-- 


f; .- ■ 


BWAY<163rdSt 


HOTEL EMPIRE 


.BOOKKS^FdE 


IftJBRAcfaftOu ria t s b gn ^ 
tw*. teat, bat water. 201-727-1® 


1 BR from CSC 2BPL_. __ 

3 SR tract 5S£D PctarjseSWO 

(»IJ?44-^B :751j4S;-70» ; 

Gt'.SEP VANASED 


inti teat, at water. 201-727-1® 
2 BP Star: 5450 PAUSACES-No. Bemn-Guttrrberg 


W7-31S6 ' 

FT LEE Effcv 5133* T ER ST3: 2 8RS , 
troir. siy. Free ert’s: "r G.'.3. view, i 
NnF— an-gw^i.- x ;- 747 - 2 : 1 ? 



At Lincoln Center 

Live at the Wbrldta Cultural Center 

eeldy fro $38.50 to $77.00 r 

Danvsi^tosil. 1 - 

BROADWAY 2166 GTS St 78M90D 

HoraopSA ■ 

ConvfeMymndani hotel 


hritbOtfldl 
| Gfl. ftT/B.1 


»;is- 


BOCta 


ht Office J*gr.E 
lO.Gin-PhmrfU 




BOOKKEE 


WeeWtv S35-S80 Daily 5HH3M 

BfiOAOWAY-312 W 109 STDRMN I “* - ' 

All oouWesw/Uttti'fits$20terwk 


Gunertwgar ItePelisacss 




NEW LUXURY BUILDING 


HUDSON 
9060 Palisade Ave. 

NORTH BERGEN, NJ. 

201-868-2777 


Broadway Mownasr 

Law rates tumshd rms wtlh ft wttbmt 
cooUcg avail Jw Col ambit um». . 

Fvb. RsMBS-Bren 1903 


BOOKKEEPE ' 

Light booktaarfng *B - - 
Can 

ftiA -4799 


• '*2l- 


BOOKKE 1 


UNI V HT5 ssi entr. tttdi wfgs. S25 wtt, Catf'i Jersey pn«kln 
with prrwte bth SSOwfe Call .rerf oily Ntahr-sa! ooe . — 
298-2209:992-9131 TIMES 

Fm.Rs9BS-QaeeB3 1911 BOOKKH - 

Work DO d lent recontl .. 



THE PERFECT 
NEW YORK 
APARTM&NT... 
In New Jersey! 


.Superb location, 
just 15 minutes 
from midtown, 
5 minutes from 
Lincoln Tunnel 


HOUSE 

-7100 Boulevard East 

GUTTENBERC. NJ. , 
tODPOSile 79 St. Yacht Basin) 

'201-869-5666 
1.2 AND 3 
BH^OOM SUITES 
Also Luxur 2 BAm Duplex 

ALL RENTALSINCLUDE: :■••• 
.Cnrtrai airaBCitiaolcB 
.Electric »no gas ^ . 

Smm boot, sluna, sondedc 
.Doorman wtee 
.River ft deyttne views 
Agent on prrn dally, eves ft Sunday 
BUILDER-OWNER-MAN AGED 
PALISADES WEST NEW YORK 


iiB#WiuhreD 


BOOKKEEPER FJC.W 
L Crrpentsl otc, far 
area. Please send res.' 
desired. etcTx6749TUt 




BOOKKEE 
F/C AYR. , 


BOOKKB 



ACCOUNTANT- 


Multi core real cat c.' 
Field area. Resumes to • 




VERSAILLES 



BOOKKEEPK- 

Musi be nod. 237JS^__ 

CallA*vra22 

BK KEEPER UR. cre*^ 


basting Bwrouohs L- 
fringe bwts -f Inpeaa 
BLKPRS 55-1145 

CAMP DIRE 
Resident cam near 
strong backoadcing a . 


•>- :a-.. 


‘ ' 


.Stunning mid-Monhatton 
skyline views 

Unique apartments. Many 
with balconies or 
solariums 

.Luxurious recreation 
facilities - 
.Galaxy Health Spa 
.Year-round 
Olympic-size 
pool-under-glass 
.Galaxy Racquet Chrb 
.Spoce^age electronic 
security 

.Doormen and 24-hour 
concieges 


Swimming Pool 

" H Sp , IS vte 


ACCNTS PAYABLE BKKPR 

Gannvit dr 00 read, know! oavrall B 1 


CASHIER-Retoil. • 


^^^.Statesar retrd, resume to 


Palisades West New York 


ADMIN ASST 




: • :* • Wy'ij 

^ if 


■ -m 

• "•Ti; -^i 


PARS l PPAN Y-TVw Hilts. 4 rms, 1 BR. 




nne« all-yr mart. Pt» 
my time ft voars. on 
need ®olv. Phone f 
895*400 - 


CHEF— H 


Treafty-sm 2Dujrfe*Aob 

ReS’aNCE REALT^ ea ^Sil-e7T-7850 


AIR H®GHT CL0JK. 

ew*d to rite & execute alrwdi blits ft 

K«. T r«r"- 


IFv. quality restav 
vufessional only. 691- 


CHEF-santfwich ft salt 
MMiaon Ave eatery. R> ■ 


SUBLET. LG PENTHSE APT 

_,TWJY TOWERS-380 Mogntohi M 
301 -UN5-6676 eves 


AIRLINE 

GROUND INSTRUCTOR 


Woodbridge Twnship-6 rm 


FAR-171 
oreow- 

maim* 

Seng resume to: 


CHEM 
GROUP LI 

PHYSICAL TI 


• t:-***- 


agMfj^griajy-- 


RENTS INCLUDE: 
Electricity, gas, on- 
conditioning + membership 
fees.in the Galaxy Health 
Spa & Galaxy Racquet Club 


flpts.bfn.-GbB. 




"T VXV V'v 




With jfron 
duties aifi 


Sametysing. 


Tong commercial bent, aerlcal 1 
MH&tg iw vccurate detail wore. 
fOlnaBut good oroaied m oev*- 
!nwt trade. Send resume X64S3 




INTRODUCTORY 
* OPTION PLAN 
Limited Number of Apts 
Effective rents begin oh 

1 Bdrm fr$490 

2 Bdrm,2 Bth fr$750 

3Bdrm^%Bth fr$960 

Penthouses end duplexes . 
a! so available 


A Village 
Within a 
Suburb - 


A5ST BKKPR S160 


A/R or A/P em, Lite typing. 
enceApeney ling 12EO 


CHEM 

WATER BASI 


Lawrence Agency 

ATTORNEY 3-Sy 

social ton. WHtofc NY toe. Administra- 
tive law background he total. Submit re- 
wm|> salary rwjrfremenfs to X6S65 


AUDIO TECHNIQAN 

Must be end In noalr at noneer 
ft TanAerg, etc; also exoa with v 


end In repair gt noneer SAE 
srp, etc; also esu wim use « 
^notog^Stot.Tq.to- 


VILLAGE 





• aa.- 

r ft* 


** - * •* - fjfejJ 


IMMEDIATE 

OCCUPANCY 


ANaEGANT 
SHOPPING MALI 
BENEATH OUR 
PRIVATE PARK 

.Our own cinema and bonk. 
.Gourmet restaurant 
.Dozens of smart shops 
and boutiques 
.Indoor garage space 


975 Sq Ft 
1 Bedroom Deluxe 
$300 
Including 
GAS 

Far Cooking 

& Heating 


CAREER 

TRAINING 


COLLECTORS-Si 

HeavyenXTlencas. tot' 
nts, Pnmpnon from i 
fiosltton, Great Neck K 


CONSTRUCTS 


MSntDCmi-FQULE 


I Bosmss Scberis 




SC 

■ - — ■ r ttv , 


■V- ; w-: 4 


_ LowCw More Hours. Q wwre. rn ^. . . , 

CPU. B5S Bway. NY 982-4000 Cwifrolft Syvten.l 


Larger Apts Also Ayaitobto 
G uWttwse/ Pool /Term.is 


Ksiwcnw-m 

MsteLHetriTrw 


CONTROLLS- 




JRS: TO AM To 7 PM Every Day 
10 AM TO 8 PM Sun ft Wed 
PECIALAPPOINTMEHT 


(JBlfs6p7«lo/(Z]2i^74 


n 


MU**"* 

DIRECTIONS: RoufeSSi to Route Sr 
East to Main slreat. RKtoefleW 

Built, owned and managed 
with care by Pod PropertiB 





'*i6% 


Looking 
for work? 


cooks-n v 


■\-, y -><*54 

-- 4 = - Ai . .ift 


— i. nr: . v . 


COOK-ltaSor 


•’ 415 *■[ •' 


Avenue-Rle 67. Tills becomes Pail 
goe Avemia. continue until Wood 
dltt Avenue. Turn left al Pant En- 
tranee(ttrts _ becomes Boulevard 
East and toll erw to Rental Cm ter. 


Prom Lincoln Tunnel area: Take 
Boulevard East S'.t miles north to 
Rental Center. 


STAMFORD HI-RISE BLOG 

STRAWBERRY HILL ; 

71-91 STRAWBERRY HILL AV 


1 BEDRM APT $275 


A joint venture of Belfer & 2 BEDRM APT $310 

Partners and The Prudential Renting Otc on PremOnen Dally &5m 


Look here tomorrow, 
too. More than 
100,000 jobs are 
being advertised 
every month in . 


Starf^Mve ruifnc 
dWw.SifopBi.7r 


.. ■" '-r*v- -a-' -t; 




CORRUGATED S 


Life insurance Corporation of 
America. 


. (203) 324-6967 

awner/Mjnt 


BUILDER-OWNER MANAGED 




unit ft Left cnEim St to traffic efreto, 
then Grove St to Strewbvry Hill Jtat . I 


Shf^ctoilork 

Sttttfs 




•- .... , “ 
. . .. 


I Cant'd on Folio* 




Y . 








W 






dm m 4773; 




WpWartMt 




2600 I Sries Help Wanted 2677|S*cB*ttaM 2677 


I'; 


. LEGAL SKRETAW 

PRESSMAN, WEB OFFSET 


<5STT717> 




kWii 



SHOWROOM SECRETARY 

Dtwnffled duties, selitno. 


. SILK SCREEN 

Pusher and set up man. Hand 
and machine operators. Good 
salary, excellent fringe bene* 
fits and profit sharing plan. 

■ Box NT 1517 • 

810 7th Ave, NYC 10019 





StateWUftpte 3091 



KNITTING MACHINERY SIS 



SALESMAN M/F 
Automatic Transm Parts 

‘4ofw we m.i§B M fi'aiwfe 


Medical Secretary 

Bwv 5#1 A*r crtflau ra with Insurance 





MEDICAL SECRETARY 


MOVSB WITH TRUCKS 

Eas'd. FullTMi tlme.M2-6752 - 


REAL ESTATE 

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE 

tor Wajlilnrtor Heights & Harlem 
FVeoertte. Good o»tr- Musi lave 


ur&tmcecu 

Mr.GlKMrT 


references. Call 
awatilor km 



Storfc Management Co., Inc. 

3M5 Johnson Ave. SrBftxJtY UM63 


tMcCEPTlONIST 

RECEPTIONIST-TYPIST 
Dwntwn law firm, hrs 9-5 
422-8300 


RECEPTIONIST AYPIST 


PUBLIC AUCHON SALE 
Under nut homy contacted m saeflan 
6331 o f iho imemai RwrnueCode, 
dm property described below it® 
bean sccnd tor nonuaymeni of dnttl- 
quem Mental revenue ntn duk 
from Abart TrertsportaHoo Corp. The 
properly w# be sold « pubK BuO- 
tkm in accorofense with the braw 
stons ri section &Kft ot the lMdmaJ 
Rename Code, and pcrWiart regula. 
ton®. DATE OF SALE: August 19, 

sxl SKSK 

1-4717 Mr. Sttcrm v I 31 Bt. « Newtown Are. ASona. N,Y. 

1110?. DESCRIPTION OF PROP- 
ERTY: One (D Chevrolet model 
C/10 station wagon— sena lumber 
CS159TB15597. PROPERTY MAY 
BE INSPECTED AT: Friend* Ga- 
ngs — Or St. and Newlown AW-j 
H eirs., August TO. 1S76. 9:30-1fr.3Q 
AM. PAYMENT TERMS: Full pay- 
ment rcqmrgd upon accaptanca o* 
tvghca M. TYPE OF PAYMENT: AB 
payments must be by cash, certified 
check, casMer'B or treasurer'll cneeb 
or by a Unfed Stales postal, bank, 

! eroress or telegraph money onfcr, 
i Make cMtia and money onterapeyi 

able to "Intern al Revenue Samul'l 
TITLE OFFERED' Only the right, titled 
i wd muses bt Abort Transoortation 
- ■ mi | - i Corp m and to the property wDI M 

. DHSttaM attp 3106 loffered for sale. M Scftrcber. Rctk 

1 , * Errcn mi rnr Officer. Ayfl, 4. JB7fl. Mamat 

MAHufeD COUPLE iRmenw Service, 7M» 37 Ave.. 

Jackson Hte, N.Y. 1 >372. 420-6503- 


- A ;ti: 


fete ft* WfeL Fete 3102 


BwsdnM Sts.WU.Fete 3112 


SALES HELP 

Chic fashion di tc n m rt boutique. end 
jgvjuii and narthiw. 34B«w or9M 


SALESPERSON 

K^^i£®SS lestate - 





WALL ST SALES 

COMMODITY 

OPTIONS 

APTJ.Y IF YOU HAVE SUCCESSFULLY 

MUNI’S, O.T.C, LAND 

^^^,•883! MK + 

FULL TRAINING PROGRAM 
Michael Little, 344-3875 


EqlqmtAKBiws 



Iseild State WM.-Me 3116 


BVStiftS OWORTMITIiS 



OFFSET CAMERAMAN 

B 8>W. End . Sal open. WW110 


fcptal Watted 


JEWtLERS-EXPD 


JEWELERS 



SAVINGS TEL1ER AND 
BKPR 3100 NCR Posting Mach 

At least 1 yrexp. mdtwn Wianh bonk, 
«huvcpg^il ri ry benefits, goad work- 



PHOTO LAB TECHNICIAN 
^TwS%lS7 sl ‘ , * ,0C - EX - 


AGO, ILL 60601 ■ 

awrfwifff fsspfover M/F 





1.qte.U R!M-Vmi'AH 


COLUMBIA AUGT1QK ROOMS- 
218 DnffieH St, B’Ujfl, N.¥. ; 
Sells Sat, Aag. 7, 1 P.M. ■ 
Eat Art & Patten glass, Qn-: 
seme, fltaseMart Panted: 
Hippos, BeHeek, Brie Brae, 
Brawzes, Clocks. Staffing & Sif- 
rerptete, 19i2B cent paintings 
& Wateredon (B. Bonos, Join 
Pike, RmwiMI H.P. Frith), 
Rosevood Empire Canft, 
Chests, Dressers, ou. Tatties l 
tos, 75 lots ABtfyn GoW,; 
Silrer & Bnonstl tawdry. Col* 
lector's Silver Masonic Packet 
Hatch. Eibib. Fri. 3-S, Sat 4 


COFFEE SHOP 

Bccxlienl business, good Joe on taww ° financial or mort- 
8th Av New equip. Lo rent,' 10 9°0® baker. E am large fees 
yr lease. Total Pr. $55,000. Law m «* opproved loan. For 
cash. Reasonable terms. Call ^ '"formahan write Ran- 
oog iooc core House, 156 5m Ave., 

N.Y..N.Y.1M10. 


8th Av New equip. Lo rent, 10 



989-1995 


Expert fiFvt&CMKte. 3416 


Imdmm&Stitj.Stves 3434 



HntatutaFK»es 3418 



PHYSICIANS 
jists (21 wmM for orowlno 
nrfvife dhuc with nafentlaf for 
praOlce. 2»l/fiQ-3WB 


Secretary to Psychiatrist 


FUtee States 3466 I Pterts nd Factories 


UNLIMITED FUNDS 

WE'LL PACKAGE 
THE WHOLE THING 


i. metier* twin, shorthand. | l.mllUnn r»li«rs mi nimum _cwirtruc- 
ng wart. 5 civs, M. SgUorvI ,,9n nnanang. permanenl fiMndnc, 
&&$/ wrgMroyniB. mWnB cwraflaoi, eauf 

1 ty twa imnn, salt lease bode i ilmSrt 
cumtnllnwnts 


iRCHAnmsE 


RENT FURNITURE ; 

Apartment Fum. Rentals 
139E57Sf. . ‘ 751-1530 

□KDrafar Sbowaan Bh R Wi Floan 



OFFERINGS 

; , »w* 


StareRxtans 3248 


■n rvm 




WetetanlStgm 



units from $149.95 
■fToff,". . . .$ 4 9.95 RB^T FURNITURE 

Ttustaitons CharchiB Furaitwe Rentals 

784-5109 1423 3r3 Av^lst^iY 535-3400 




N5 GALORE 

ROM 1-100 DIN- 



Jenky* 




BrartjiBarter Shops 



UNISEX SALON FOR SALE 


HAIR SALON FOR SALE 




ppe 



uwa>tfnusas|M 

3 WEST 61st ST., N.Y.CJ 

m sun roue Menu - 

TODAY, SAT^ 12 NOOK 

A VEflV CHOICE SELECTION OF - 

ANTIQUES 




Established Glass Shop 

In Calsrado, Including all stock R 
gjf^R h^S“Kwn, MMOO. 


PERSIAN & cam ESE ROGS 
OIL PAINTINGS — BRAWIHGS 

* PORCELAINS— SftVER 
RnmiG ft KBHBBII EMSEI9BLES 

S.mZUAactimersLMmit 


Mefe-BesortS'tete 3444 


Hldsricit In n. Minutes from. Seneca 
1 



T 


BUSIN E 


Call Mr. Barnes 


Drag Stores 


— «** ■ *W - A «-» ■ 

n S/ flUkf lJUln3ZvS> 

Lass Offered 3408 fFeodSbras 


3438 


GLASS & CHINA SHOPPE 

TON AYE— HMTMffIC ' 
INITV 
ease, must 
icdoallor 


BASKIN ROBBINS ICE 
CREAM STORE EXCaLENT 
QUE&JS CORNER 
LOCATION 
CALL 5T 6-561 -0034 


urn 










HARDWARE STORE For Sale 



V' r 




7 A 8 CL-Marquise. .. . .$63) 
6^0-JJowid;.-....-.$5^)0 
4,03dJ , «ar..J.,.. 

m 6^Monniss.I ... :$2£0Q 
Arar^saiswetcROfd . 

Mritom 212-247-3438 



ITALIAN AM 

B SUPERETTE 

Prln only. Priced for 1 






mm 



WTW0RMJ 


AND CONTEMPOHARY BOB, 
UV1MG A DtNINO ROOM FUH- 
NtSMNCa. 

SALE CONDUCTED BY 

J. & B. EBEN,Aucfrs 


FRUIT STORE For Sale 
modem a 






£NaM£LS£I LVEa & COLLECT! BLE5. 

CATHEDRAL 


‘ GALLERIES 

795B'WAY>LY.C. . 

teesaad&faks 3336 


ALL PIANOS WANTED 1 


wwWMMerttum 


^¥7 




DELI TAKE OUT-MIDTOWN 


SILENT w ACTIVE PARTNER' 

Wanted. hnebiMtanitn 
CaniSftt new hobby 


WFPr 




mmsm 




through 

want ads 

BUY 

through 
want ads 


Motels «f Motor tarts 3452 


Umkjttt Stores 



pm 




iJSS^lcSSMANSBHsBvG- Dry Qeanmg Store 

I agfi^S5 , .fc3S a,M m “ SH S , «iS K 


rra 


Thermograph Bust ness Card 




your want ad 


lyr 























































































































■ r - • — •'£' ISM’-V; ' . ■‘vJArs't 


THE NEW YORK TIMES , SATURDAY, AUGUST 7 3 1976 


t ,•*# 


State's Cuts in Hospital Medicaid 

Re fleet 3 -Pronged Fiscal Problem 


tion of the already deficit-rid- [eluding operating costs— and 


By STEVEN JL WEOTAN and H^Dit^ Cor- ouTof this lump sum comes 

ft SSirJ't pSKV* ™ «■» «ty s s« ■“J*®-?** 


“a,v“ ESSS31 C “jiT.SBMta f « *• current 

error Carey and the ciiy's mu- ^tenSSdppage" a the Medicaid . portion 

nicipal hospitals in a three-way ^ a ^ new F ra 6 tes goes down, the city still gives 

tug-of-war revealing _ entirely wouId require “standby” spend- the corporation the same lump 
different fiscal and - r Auctions. sum,” First Deputy Mayor John 

political approach- h . . - e. Zuccotti explained recently. 

* delivurv^here" 0 ^ ^mouth!^ The stale, however, stands to 

A,ul y .a . said Paul J. Hston, the state's ^ve money from the changed 

nnw S. I deputy budget director, who rates^d ttore Mvira pto 

maim- nhstede to S the ^Pal atomte the new rates. ““ attan P t “> br “S ato “ t *»■ 
major obstacle to ending tne reductions were not un- ciency, were the reason for the 

three-day-old municipal hospi- aSSdAted ta^taT^? ™ rates in the tint place, 
tal stri ke , much as a similar From the Governor’s viewnoinL 

dispute m June kept the Gty of the nte $3^ blSdto Se 

University of New York shut structure lies in the fact that gradations that- the new rates 
down while the state and city *t determines how much cash taiS rates 

bickered over who was going the different hospitals get for ^sp^TrSe have 

to pay for its deficit J* ttV^UdS 

In the hospital situation, the S in^ura d^S^'wES tension between Mr.Beame and 
disagreement involves the gf* £ wne- Mr _ C2rey . ^ hospital system, 

tk.f ctota nffipiale IiavP SSimftoMd £S? has yet «? 



A Struck Hospital Finds ‘Life Goes C 


costs that State officials have ~™V“sirikT™ all of the more than $100 mil- 

termed virtually out of control. ^ , - lion in cuts that the Emergency 

^?1Rf3U£S S3? in 1 StSM centre! Board callS 

ff’iS?- S-.ThSJW -«**■ f hr ^ S(o“& ts51bm,M,iudget 

rocketed nearly 400 percent. ^hus, from the The $21 million to $23 million 

Reasons listed if in reductions of state and Fed- 



rocketed nearly 400 percent. 
Reasons listed 
Experts attribute the 


creases to inflation, which 


are grossly inefficient, and if “ 
e in- they must lay off employees in 

ich is order to run on a reimburse- s ¥ st ?P threaten to fo 


Tha New Ycric Tiroes 

Leonard Piccoli, executive director of Bronx Municipal 
Hospital, in bis office yesterday. 


By DAMON STETSON 
A group of 40 gypsies, 
some crying, some praying 
and some talking emotional- 
ly, stood outside the oner- 
gen cy room at the Bronx 
Municipal - Hospital Center 
eariy yesterday while sur- 
geons performed an emer- 
gency operation on a 5-year- 
old boy who had suffered a 
skull fracture in an auto 
accident- * 

While the strike goes on, 
ambulances cohtinne to bring 
in emergency cases, a finan- 
cial investigator is running 
ah elevator, a secretary is 

serving as a messenger and 
a mechanic is working in the 
. kitchen. Outside at the hospi- 
tal entrance on Eastc faester 
Road, striking pickets were 
shouting taunts and threats 
at anyone who passed their 
lines. ■ . 

“But there’s one thing 
about a hospital crisis.” said 
Patricia Rainford, associate 
director of the center, “life 
goes on.” 

Volunteers Praised 


all have, to live together 
afterward.” 

• Tfife .836-bed hospital de- 
veloped an inventory of 
medical and ' surgical '.suj>* = 
plies, drugs ■ and disposable 
linens and tHshes well ahead 
of the walkout, Mr. Piccoli 
Said. Half of the 3, 700-mem- 
ber staff have continued to - 
work, he added. ' and the 
volunteers fiaye been "mag- 
nificent.” 

-The patient Toad has been-' 

- reduced- froiii . 7T0 last T ues 1 
day to 4T6,..-with only to? 
safest patients.-, remaining. 


went to CHy HaH on otij 
tone . ;; and . demons 
against . hospital^ 

cutSi" * ■'••• -Vv 

■ He a 

“Wefeel m: strom 
they [toe strikers j do, | 
have to, put responsiM 
patients, .first But-tha 
not mean -we’re in opp 
to the strikers, '. 'f- yC 
; “Itfs a whole differs 
game than a strike . jug 
factory: Those- cr^sra 
et lines to toat situari 
scabs. But 1 lamp* rei 
Patients can’t” r'T 

-.'..As. £ result of. tfe 
and extra expenses" fi ; 
posables," linen,: tran 
tion fend -other ftesfcs 
Piccoli ; sai4 opratn^y 
for theweek are upW^ 


But pregnanC women have , Operating Coriil 
continued to come to the has- - . ' - „ 1t . - i 

pita] to ..have their jbabies. 
irith the resolttoat the birth... 

rate at the^osptal was< up. : 

threefold this week. , SRJiiiu^SJmS 

Staff Trimed-Tri^fUs’ ■ 

With the reduced patient :. $250,000: The- amougg 
load, however, the current, through ., nonpmymet 
work force, if <ir remains . strikers’ salaries. Ta i 
stabilized, will be able to would reduce this aM- M 
take care of patients and by only about 560,000: M 
keep the ho^ntal . operating Mti PiccoU,' who-faa i 

for a • number of days, -Mr. quietiy about- 
PiccoO said- measures, to cope 

He described the hospitaTs.- 1 jrtrfise crisis, raised 

when he t a lk ed. abg^^| 
cald and the re in mug^H 
formulas as appE^P 
nicipal hospitals.^V^I , 
He asserted -that!®- - ' 


The executive director of house staff of doctors,, as. a 
the hospital is Leonard Picco- dedicated and talented group-' 


It He appeared calm and. re- 


forre happens when they run a defi- ments as expenditures that wej ^ h^ 

cit? Who is going to -pay? If have to reduce. Another part r? 1 ® M cooinz with the 


that bad strong feelings formulas as appBe^r 
about the strike issues tor . nicipal hospitals.-.V^K 
volving budget reductions He assertril -that^"- 
and layoffs. Many of the doc-. ' nicipal hospitals' 
tors, he acknowledged, -had . disadvantage and did 
a conflict between - their re-- ceive adequate- rec 


_ r .' &*- 

... ■ ■V''*’ **>rr 


SAsSrtS sa « 


portant in the current crisis. !y of the city’s hospital system. Yonc uty. .wnue one may pm iS^ 1 

enormous waste and ineffi- jh this view they were joined ti 16 ™ 85 independent, whatjment looks at Medicaid pay .begun 

ciency in the hospital system, yesterday by the Health Sys- ^ ^ ^ « mm— 
with no incentives built into Ieni5 Agency, a federally-sub- 

the Medicaid reimbursement sidized group set up to approve TTf T iL, T> ^ ' r i — . 


structure to keep costs down, plans for construction of new 
These and other factors have hospitals in the city area, 
led to a situation where nearly can j £ viable? 

■■Uistopoxm tow 
was spent in. New York State, the Health and Hospitals Cor- 
In the midst of his own budg- Porabon can sustain further 
et crisis, Governor Carey last budget reductions that would 


Weather Reports and Forecast 


Summary 


et crisis. Governor Carey last budget reductions tnat would cloudy skies, mild tem- 

loss^oT^ue [as a iS.lt | 

rStes trfi reit^mreement to hos- executive director of toe There will be a chOTce for 

_ *- — scattered showers and tnun- 


r • n<raE 


• wiriay 

80’ lNr-VT7 t r, 




pitals— a move rejected by the « « ^ «■ » «S" S.®2 


^ e ^ 1S poration wouidbeacastrophe.” em half of the Eastern Sea- 

Tailored Rates A mayoral aide said y ester- board and from the Ohio 

Instead, the lawmakers di- day that, while the corporation Valley through the lower 
Tected toe State Health Depart- had been informed last month Mississippi Valley. Widely 
ment to put into effect a plan that lower reimbursement scattered showers and thun- 
establishing reimbursement rates were forthcoming, nothing dershowers me expected 
rates tailored to each individual had been declared certain, and from the northern Rockies 
hospital— with the added un- that a higher rate, which he to the Pacific Northwest, 
usual feature of imposing pen- said the city was expecting. Mild to unseasonably cool 
alties on those institutions would have been “entirely de- temperatures will occur from 
found to be billing the Govern- feasible.” the Ohio Valley through the 

ment for overuse of X-ray, “Reasonable people have dif- Middle Mississippi Valley, 
laboratory and other expensive ferences of opinion on this," from the northern Rockies to 
services. he added. toe Pacific Northwest and in 

A few weeks ago the state Mean while, a spokesman for northern California. The 
handed down its new individ- ^ Governor said Mr Carey remainder of toe nation will 
ual rates for the city's volun- bad n0 intention 0 f revising the h * ve cIear to P^y cloudy 
tary, or private nonprofit, bos- _ teg UDwan u despite a plea sklBS aild seasonable tem- 
pitals. which prompted a law- by ^ Beame. I peratures. 

suit by the hospitals charging J Th ’ different of Partly emudy skies ac- 

that the rates were unfair. On ™ e , “2*2* S2 compared by warm temp- 


ernor Carey. “A noaviable cor- dershowers along the south- 


ern half of the Eastern Sea- 
board and from the Ohio 


•r .. "* • rjyyf - • if Sr* . : • * 

MiTLwpTr--^ jcm . i_ 1/ j* 

J • A '• • l ' r-TTMW -. ^ 

80 *•£«'• • C ^* A ‘ : ' • ' . 

( I \V /.V 90' I * . i.* vra* 

/r/ I 5&b«.'c wr- # .*aSr* »«*«*• 

&&£ ; V > 

/ 7 ' .. -..-SSLea 


1 / l’- 

90' 100’ inn- 




90* 


TODAYS 
FORECAST 8 P.M. 
AUGUST 7, 1976 


• :ri- 

' 90' 


Partly c»udy skies ac- 


that the rates were unfair. On M d ^ Govemor are- companied by warm temp- 

Thursday the state handed f^ d l < L C ored bv toe method toe cretures and afternoon 
down its rates for toe munici- S,l Tow f£l showers occurred yesterday 

pally owned hospitals, now ex- co^.^hichVe fi- “ toe New York Metropol- 

penenong a strike. nanrpd half bv the Federal Itan area > while showers and 

Those new rates immediately one-quarter Sr thundershowers stretched 

complicated toe labor negotia- ^ one-quarter by the England through 

tions, and Mayor Beame as- ^ q the Ohio Valley and into the 

sailed them as bringing about /' ... _,- d h+ Middle Mississippi Valley, 

a “new and imantidpited re- “g! Scattered thuidershowere 

duction” in sUte payments to ^ wer e reported from Florida 

the 16 municipal hospitals. advocate lower Malicaid reum- t > ie eastern Gulf 

However, staff audits of the 1 States and into Kentucky 

state's Emergency Financial and Tennessee. The reinain- 

Control Board, the panel head- P®y less “ om lts ov ^. buaget. der 0 f ^ pastej-p half of 
ed by Mr. Carey that oversees But the city subsidizes toe the nation had cloudy to 
the city's Finances, show there Health and Hospitals Corpora- partly clo'udv skies. Except 
were warnings as early as June|tion by giving it a lump-sum for cloudy skies and a few 
that the new rates might ex- payment of $478-miliion to showers in the Pacific North- 
acerbate the precarious posi-| cover additional expenses, in-| west, sufany skies and sea- 


, f AlBLWERWJt _ 




IgP.:/ 

/ -i -v - • ^ q“' 

9 - « - - gJssr » rr**" 

y« y» «u«sco / ^ w«*s / 

/ V V'- .^ l0us ta c r‘ rr ’m^ A / / pao M * I ’ PUS 

ia^SO. 106 2. yQ * 1 

I rLsoco 

3000 -A ^ 

f- ‘ VjT l go 

\ 


t Rsuts besde Sarcn 

; -• C»0« is ar j qr a * u rft 

■ > CcJS fror^: 3 fcarslary 

co:tf and 
.fjarrtr a~. erCet «Mi 
L-= co^e* »- pushes ww 
a .••■eije rooihand 
^ aas:. 

* uy.-r- *xf ft a tejiaary 

-80* be^-eer.u.'ama.rardare. 

Kwi-e or C3>:fer 
a^ewn'-^trenamapr 
e tcrceS as :: ar«xs. 
usjci'r rcnM anJ east. 

Ocs^.=ee Iws a 
acpg M.HI a-r aas 

t/oascs^ T.«*ees 
c« cz'i a > causing 

a^as roca;« 
a-ec^accr 
CahtncssM:.*; tcrecast 
irafurun !et**- 

* cea:^res 

• • •** Kroi-sarB l.-.es :scM 

es-j; &V7T«ne 
. tam- 

f'-'T.v carets 

arj.-»d3!A- 
•.\.=e me certg' of 

.as !=*-s.-tssura systems. 

r . C'CC*---->sa fre-n 

Wuim Pros- 
/ *.-ep/s!emsurja!:ynw.e 

/ eac. I 


sponsibility to their patients' 
and their concern about the 
overall situation, and did not 
want to perform the duties 
of strikers. ■ 

“But when push comes to 
shove," he said, "they’re ter- 
rific In helping patients.’’ 

Mr. Piccoli, talking quietly 
of a hectic week in which 
he had not seen his wife and. 
six children in Yonkers', 
I made it dear, however, that 
\ he and -his administrative 
] staff were also worried about 
i what has been happening to 
1 the municipal hospitals. He 
saidc 

“Most of those working 
their tails off have just as 
} much feeling about the budg- 
et cuts And the layoffs as 
those strikers out there on 
j the sidewalk. Even present 
company [he and John 
Rhoder, deputy director] 


ceive adequate- rezj 
ment rates. He said:; 1 
“I don’t .lihderatai. 
. this hospital and 
fiore [a voluntary h 
are being treated 
ently. Montefiore: ge 
for - a . patient and 
talking about $197 
But our rate include 
dollar - of . physician! 
while doctors in ad> 
at Montefiore are pa 
tionaDy.’’. • • . . ^ . 

If the Bronx HbsjpL 
to transfo‘«.patient f 
vate or a proprietan 
tal, Mr. Piccoli sale 
hospitals .will -not tt 
patient even in the' ' 
crisis .unless the- i 
costs are-covered. . 1 
“We are still txku 
of people,” he adde 
they [the State]' are, 
away the money witl“ 
to do it” •: 




•:rr -v-v =?'- 










•53 


QrJ» |JJS^r® Cieu3 ' 

©•« ®:"c; ©k 1 .:-- 

c«sr® ,aa 

| *** >4 j'rrki w 


ri ^=o s» 




KUSM «.j«3 *»BJ 




Oz^crT ciT o*y 

CS?1 Cncb OtST 

0^4 OS*« 0»m Owi 


YESTERDAY 8 P.M. 
AUGUST 6, 1979 




The United States Depart- among Board men 
'ment of Housing and Urban spend most cf the cr 
Development approved a $102-2 devel^wnent funds ic 
milh'on grant to New York City ar ^ 5 ' , 

yesteniay under the 1974 Com- 
nramty Development Act areas, said that sina 
News of toe- action came had expected approv 
from a spokesman for Senator funds, it had tempore 
James L. Buckley. Conserva- ®*l uioney from plana 
tive-Republican of New York, *?_ \S. 

who said that Federal officials fvSidj fi^^g^ec 
ihad informed the Senator’s of- to reJure them the 
fice of the final approval of week, 
the grant, which is the second Still, city officii 
to the city under the. program, disappointed at the s 
• •The funds will be used for srant, which was the 
a variety : of rehabilitation, fierce competition an 
code-enforcement and site-im- Rtoups sedan 

proveraent efforts in the city. , F e r er T. ^ d ? ' 

Deputy Mayor Paul Gitoon °r ,hZ 
Jr. when told of the announce- L . ■ TJ i ’™ 

ment. said it was a welcome Sf 1 ™*- 

Anythin* Ul * PTedudCf 


o1“l wtafS « 

?! toe grant,_ he wd, will CT nee ds. saidMr.^ Glbsor 


s enable temperatures domi- 
nated the western half of 
the country. Warm tem- 
peratures were recorded in 
the plateau region and toe 
southern Rockies, and it was 
hot in portions of toe South- 
west. 


Mayor Beame won a commit- oris visit, according to city ■ ■ — — 

1 ment yesterday in' Washington aides, was to assure toe Sec- t-i . 

from William T. Coleman, Sec- ™**y ' ^at toe state and city TOrCCaSt 

* a had continued to give the high- 

rctsiy of XraiiOTortatioD, to try their full suoDoit dcsoitp 

to accept or reject ; the <*V‘ op^sition in ahnejSrts oPthe 

proposal for a $1.1 biihon West West Side, and that both Gov- nj* Hw* rnmuBh tomorrow; high 
•' Side highway before toe end emor Carey and Mayor Beame £ 

; of the year. had rejected the alternative of * lsh > r 'j, a ' ,*» s> miles o»r hour io- 

An environmental - impact seeking to use Federal high- 
; ; statement “for the giant West- way ™oney for mass-transit 

way project — which contem- purposes. cr ram ni«iPlwg£ y lonmrmT; 

j ' plates a mostly underground After the meeting, Mr. Cole- ** mi<f - 70 ’»c i*» 

j Federal Interstate System high- man slid that “local support” u»s island >nd long island 
u way along the western shore would be a key factor in his whtt 

: of Manhattan from the Battery own decision, according to a it* mid-TO's. i<w tonighi in «« 

. to 42d Street— has not yet been spokesman for the Mayor. ES^WLSS ^TiA SSZ 
• formally submitted for approval Mr. Beame also explored toe Sffia 
' to the department, although of- possibility of getting further SIS t £ ihSlStojT mil 

i ; ficials said it would be ready Federal subsidies for the city 5ii«5II osf iI~5 l 1 oody ‘®2! 9nr *J°* .!» 

; ; for submission in a month. for mass transit, under a series ‘ & 

■ A spokesman for Mr. Beame. of other programs, the Mayor’s easte^ > p^<nsylvania— juaskv dauiv 
} who flew to the capital in the spokesman, said. witti xvtfemd mwu 

’ ' afternoon, reported that Mr. The highway project has been 

Coleman had said “something in the works and a matter of m,tf - 40- *- 
< ought to be done” to replace controversy for years, although - 
;j . the dilapidated existing high- plans for final details of the 
i . way. which the city is prepar- Westway compromise have 

!j ing to tear down south of 42d been the fogns of planners' AFiiv 

Street work for 18 months. ** UA v 

. Mayor Gives Assurances The Beame administration Ab***, .....^‘710^? 838“ 

; Although it is not uncommon position that the A'"*®”**" ■ g jj- « cloudy 


CONNECTICUT, RHODE ISLAND AND 
MASSACHUSETTS — Becoming clou* to- 
dav olth a chancy of rain, hioh In the 
mld-70's; ocwslonaJ rain rkaly lenieht. 
lo«r in Hit low M's, Mild with occasional 
rain Itkelr tomorrow. 

VERMONT— Sunni norffi srehon today 
and variable cloudiness south section, 
high in Jhe upoer 70's to low M's; fair 
nodh section toirintrt and cloudy with 
stwwers likely south section, low In the 
uoeer 50*s to mid-AO's. Mosliy cloudy 
and mild wtth showers tomorrow. 

NEW HAMPSHIRE AND MAINE— Mostly 
tunny north section today and increasing 
cloudiness with a chance of showers 
south section, high in thhe mM-7trs; 
mostly clear north section and chance 
of showers south section tonight, low 
In I he mfd-50's Mild with rain likely 
tomorrow. 


9 AJ*. 

ID A.M. . 

Temo. Hum. THI 
... 74 69 7| 
.. 77 67 74 

Winds 
” W 10 
SW 1 

Bar. 

29.99 

30.02 

11 A.M.. 

. 77 

57 

77 

SW 

7- 

29.99 

Noon 

.. 35 

55 

73 

w 


29.99 

I PJW.. 

.. 87 

54 

SO 

AW 


29.93 

2PJ6.. 

.. 86 

55 

.79 

MW 


29.97 

3 P.M. 

.. 36 

55 

79 

NW 


29.97 

4P.NL. 

.. 83 

63 

78 

NE 


29.97 

5PJA.. 

.. 75 

91 

74 

SE 


29.99 

6 P.M.. 

. 74 

13 

73 

SF 


29.99 

7 PM,. 

.. 75 

85 

73 

SE 


29.99 

a pm.. 

.. 73 

90 

72 

5E 


79.99 

HPJA.. 

.. 72 

91 

71 

NE 


30.03 


Precipitation Data 


Prod rntst ion Data 
(21-hour period ended 7 PJAJ 
Twelve hours ended 7 A.M., Ofl. 
Twelve hours ended 7 P.M., 4M. 

Total this month to date, .W. 

Total since January 1. 23.47. 

Normal thl* month, 4.01. 

Devs with precipitation this dale. 24 
since IBM. 

Least amount this month, 0.24 In 1964. 
Greatest amount ttib month. 10.86 In 
19S5. 


Temperature Data 


Sun and Moon 


National Weather Service (As of 5 P.M.) 
NEW YORK CITY — Cloudy with ceriods 
of ram likely through tomorrow; high 
bolh days In the mid-TO's. tor tonight 
in tne mid-M's. winds northeasterly to 
easterly aMG to 30 miles oer hour to- 
day and tanighl. Precipitation orobability 
40 Percent today and fon gnt. 

NOR TH JERSEY. ROCKLAND AND WEST- 
CHESTER COUNTIES— Cloudy with pe- 
riods of rein likely through tomorrow; 
high bohi days in the mid-70'i, lew 
tonight in the mid-40'S. 

LONG ISLAND AND LONG ISLAND 
SOUND— C/cct/y with periods of ram ((He- 
|y through tomorrow; hlah both days in 
ttie mid-TO's. low tonight in the mid-M s. 
Visibility on the Sound over 5 miles 
Ihrwgh tonight, lowering to 1 to 3 mite* 
during rain. 


Extended Forecast 


(Monday Ihrauah Wednesday) 
METROPOLITAN NEW YORK, LONG IS- 
LAND AND NORTH JERSEY-Coudy 
wllh periods et rain likely Monday 
through Wednesday. Daytime highs wHI 
average In the low BO's, while overnight 
lows average In the mid-Hi's. 


Yesterday's Records 


Hasten* Daylight Tim* 


nwrairjtrffh suffered shaven »mf a ftv 
thunderstorms 

EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA — Mostly doudy 
with s«atterea_ showers md tnunuer. 
Terms through tomorrow; high both days 
in. .the mld-7D*s, low tonight to the 
mld-40'i. 


1 A.M. 

Temp. Hum. T-Hl 
71 68 68 

Winds 

5 9 

Bar. 

29.W 

2 A.M.. 

.. 7) 

M 

68 

510 

29 99 

3 A.M.. 

.. 77 

7) 

69, 

5 a 

*V.9S 

4 A.M.. 

. 71 

71 

69 

5 9 

29.98 

5 A.M.. 

.. 7? 

7) 

69 

5 8 

29 97 

6 A.M.. 

.. 71 

as 

6a 

SW > 

29.97 

7 AM. 

. 7T 

68 

68 

W 8 

29.98 

8 AM. 

... 71 

71 

69 

SW i 

29.99 


(19-hour period ended 7 PJA.) ' 
Lowest. 71 at 12:01 A.M. 

Highest. 89 at 1:0| P.M. 

Mean. 80. 

Normal on this dale, 76. 

Departure from normal, +4. 

Departure this month, -i|. 

Departure this year, +182. 

Lowest this dale last year, 64. 

Highest Nils date last year, 78. 

Mean this dale last year, 71. 

Lowest tempera hi r* (his dale, 57 In 1951. 
Highest temperature this dato. 97 In 1955. 
Lowest mean (tils date. 62 in 1915. 

Highest mean thl* dad. 88 In 1955. 
Hiehest Temoerature-Mumiditv Index yts- 
lerday, SO. 

‘Ttw Temperature-Humidity index da- ■ 
lcrlbes. numartcaliy. the human dijeom- 
tort resulting irom temper a hire and 
moisture, il is computed by adding dry 
end wet bulb femperatwt readings, multi - 
plying the sum by 0-4 and adding 15. 
5umtw estimates indicate about 10 per- 
son! of tne oooulace era uncomfortable 
betora I ho index oases 70/. more then 
heir after it passes 75. and almost ail 
at 80 or above. 


S roonnue the o^ratTo™ U Mr. Gibsoy 

the Harienr-East Harlem, South 
Bronx and Central Brooklyn „ /w 

model Cities programs. Onippillg / f . 

He said the city had been late — v. 

in filing • its a p^>K cation for • Incoming 

funds because of a dispute with — ^ - 

Queens Borough President, today, aim. ; 

Donald R. Manes, who held up ^J n a C a[!fi m ?w , w U e«h*«' 
Board of Estimate approval of oceanic tHome). Lett s«i' 
the application charging that due a a-M. if w. ssh* st. 
toe citjrs expooditure plan rep- 
resented “complete n^lect" of sE* ** 1 ** * “ 
moderate income areas. Mayor totemum (Hoii.^mar.) 
Beame. had sought agreement g»* **• * ; *» » a *- 


TODAY AUG. i 
DORIC {Home). Latt Bam 
due. 8 A_M. et w. 55th St. 




ROTTERDAM (Holl.-Azner.T 
murfa Aug. S; dim S AM 

STATEN DAM (HoJI.-Anw.) 
mode Aug. 5; due B AJA. 




(Supplied by the Hayden Planetarium) 
The sun rises today al 5:57 A.M.; 
sets a) 8:03 PM.; end will rise tomor- 
row si 5:58 A.NL 

The me on rises today at 6:16 PM./ 
tots tomorrow at 4:37 A.AS-; and will 
rise tomorrow at 6:57 P.M. 


Outgoing 


Ajo. 16 Aug. 25 
Last Qir.l New 


Planets 


NEW YORK CITY 
fToiMrrmv, E.D.T.) 

Venus — rises 7:09 A.NL: sets 8:45 P.M. 
Mars— rises 8:52 AM. ; sets PrX PM. 
iuplterwlses 12:21 A.M.; sets 2:45 PJ6. 
5a him— rises 5: 16 A.M. ; sets 7:40 P.M. 

Planets rise in the east and set In 
the west, reaching iheir hiphes* point on 
the north-sou Ih meridian, midway be- 
tween their times of riling and setting. 


Pacific Rower Sighted - - 5 

SEATTLE, Aug. 6 (UPl)—Pat sailing toda- 

Quesnel, 27 years old, a Seat- s«“*h Amwica. West i* 
tie-area fishetman trying to row 1 

a 22-foot dory to Hawaii, has maipo (Chilean), auto ai 
been sighted about 100 miles » md VriHnto 25; sain l 
offshore of Crescent City, Calif, fHnmp , . 

The Coast Guard reported to- a p jul, t ram w. 55th st. 
day that the tanker San Sinena * protbjlauj jasr aloe ie- 
Two got Within shouting dis- ^ k«iV sjarfiim S 
tance of Mr. Quesnel, who saia Rotterdam (Hon.-Amer.). 
that be was In good condition ^ d ss t h 4 s? uda l3; * sl1 * l:: 
and hoped to be in Hawaii be- statenbam (How -Amer.i 


MAIP0 (Chilean). Cal I to Al '■ 
20 and Valparaiso 25; sails L~ 
NJ. 

OCEANIC (Home). Nassau / 

4 Pjt. from w. 55th St. 


tween Nov. 10 and 20. He left »•*» 5 p.m. irom 


La Push, Wash.. July 14, and 
has no communication radio on 
board. 


SAILING TOMORRi 
Sooth America, West >« 
AREOBO (PRMMI). San j\. 
sails from Elizabeth, NJ. 


PinUCAKV 

cmuEBCULifoncss 

5100-5102 


ZjOST A2VD foi 

5103-5104 


Abroad 


Aberdeen ... 
Amsterdam . 

.. .. 1 P.M. 
1 PAIL 

64 

66 

doudy 

Cloudy 

Copenhagen 
Dublin ... 






Asuncion . . . 

8 A.M. 

54 

Geer 

Lime . . 

Jc 

II 

.... Mdnl. 

50 

Pt. ddy. 

London . 

Beirut 

Birmingham 

..... I P.ML 
.. .. 1 P.M. 

68 

64 

dear 

Cloudy 

Malle ...J 
Manila .. 











QsaWanca .. 

... . Noon 

81 

Clear 

Nice 


• i ah reuutu UNIUOJ 2 lu uuac c . ~~ Aimgin 6 am. s : Pt. cldy 

long as a year to decide on a money and 10 a^oo jam. sa cieer 

project the size of Westway, money -- wo i d d Auckland" hmI » pt. dd» 

Mr. Beame went to Washington constitute an essentia] mgredi- 2 pm 6i cioody 

■j with the hope that Mr. Cole- Clt y s economic re- IPA 64 Cloudy 

. 'man could be persuaded to co Xf r ^ r ‘ . 2 5-JJ- S 

■ •speed to process since toe .The city, according to one Cairo . a pImI u a»«r 

■; . , Washington office had been ap- official, is prepared to begin C55#Wan!a No<w si dear 

1 i prised of the city’s plans for tearing down the first section ^ 

. - the last couple of years. of the exis ti n g highway, from 

l- i- Approval is being sought for I4th £ treet ’ bu .^ such ,^ TT O 

5 toe route, not the actuS con- £«« does not mean it would U.b 

Straciion of the highway, al- proraedingon the assurap- 

though designation of the West 5?” ot risderal approval of _ 

■ Side corridor for a Fedga! In- w «^ay ; JJ* 

terstate road would be the key ^ , united st*i«, hbb and iwr teowrotow* 

step leading to construction it- 37 Die in Korea Landslide 
. i self, according to highway of- SEOUL. South Korea, Aug. 6 ttw swtod mWjtfj rj*. 
ficials, fAgence France- Presse) — At fadey^AH are in {um 

Mr. Beame said after the least 37 persons were killed BnW* 
meeting that he had no con- today when a landslide buried lm hi a* &««?■ 

, cern that Mr. Coleman might ^ j mountain ?£ a,nr S I s . 01 w - *«r. 

' , try to delay consideration of a . smaU ““£? OQ a mounain 94 .. w 

\ the project because of politics s *°P e near Wan JUt l-Q AncuofM* x 54 ii Rdin 

—the fact that a new Demo- south of here, toe police re- ^ 

cratic administration .. might ported. (Twenty bodies have AHwHcoiy tj 7? .. sj«m» 

have different ideas about it been recovered and toe police K m w 

• should there be a change in believe more were buried un- finings « 2? r y±. 

January, following the Novem-lder rocks that- smashed the IShIS*™.." 2 ” . ni'iS: 


Local Time Terw. Condition 
.. .. 1 P.M. M CJMr 
.. — 1 P.M. 61 Cloudy 

1 P.M. 7? Clear 

8 P.M. 79 Ctoirit? 

. ... 7 A.M. 64 Cloudy 


. 7 A.M. 64 Cloudy 
Koon 70 deer 
• 1 P.M. 70 PI. {itfy. 
. I P.M. 95 Clear 
1 P.M. 61 Cltar 
t PM. 81 Pt cldy. 
9 A.M. 52 Ra.n 
3 PM. 70 Pt. cldy. 
5 P.M. 81 Rato 
I PM. 77 Clear 


Local TTme Tamo. Condition 

Osin I P.M. 68 Rain 

Paris ’.... . 1 P.M. 79 Ciwr 

Peking 8 P.M. 79 Ctoudv 

Rio de Janeiro ..9 A.M. 70 P». cldy. 

Roma 1 P.M. 81 Clear 

Saigon .' 8 PJIL 81 Cloudy 

Seoul 9 PM. 79 Cloudy 

Sol 1 4 2 PM. 52 Rain 

SkjWmlni I P.M. 57 Tstorm 

Sydney ID P.M. 50 Cigar 

Telsel 8 P.M. 81 Pt. cldy. 

Tt*wan 3 P.M. 97 Clear 


Ended I PM., lowest temperature In last 
12-how period; highest t em pe ra ture 
In 24^wur period 


Tel Aviv 
Tokvo .. 
Tunis .. 
Vienna 

Warner . 


2 P.M. 88 Clear 
9 P.M. 79 Goody 
. 1 P.M. 84 Clear 
1 P.M. 68 Pt. cldy. 
I P.M. 64 Pt. ddy. 


Acapulco .. 
Barbados 
Bermuda .. 
Bogota — 
Guadalaiara 
Guadeloupe 
Kingston .. 
Ma rattan .. 
Mexico City 
Monterrey . 


Low High Condition 

75 91 Cloudy 

79 88 Pt. ddy. 

... 78 89 Clear 

50 63 Pt. cldy. 

.. . w 82 Pi. ddy. 

73 91 PI. Cldy. 

77 91 Cloudy 

75 90 Pt. ddy. 

57 77 Pt. Mr. 

15 93 Doudy 


Public Hotlcw ^IM 

NOTICE OF b0N-Dl5CRlMINAT(NG POLICY 


San JuM 60 90 Pt. ridv. 

SI. KMs 77 87 PI. ddy. 

St. Thomas ■■■; 79 90 Pi. ddy. 

Tegucigalpa 66 77 Drtzrte 

Trinidad 73 90 Pt. cldy. 


NOTICE OF tj ON-DISCRIMINATING POLICY HELP! $100 REW . . 

VkWzM ft s ?s>- - 

Hlua^to nS stod^to ,t d m Tta nfJSSSSa ‘ej+fuS^S*, 

Bud: toy Country Dev School does not dis- w '"- No werttoia. 9M-«4'6i ^ 

criminate on the basis of race In ttie admls- l 

slon of students with regard to endemic lOCT.rAWlPSA fACP J,.r 
oolldes, admission policies, stfolmhlw & ^ 'feL 

toan oroorems, athletic or other school ad- #U«t E _49 Sta 

minis tered progra ms: T °* n * r ' L ^LT^l 

AMERICAN MUSEUM of Natural History , L £zr_ i-- Vj 


73 90 Pt. cldy. 


LOST: 9 vr. old brown & wMh 
minis In effiidi cats A Kittens ar e mm aeq, q. ? p, 

SoiSaMj. skHoi n. *. 

Si 1 %2m a 0«»r SlBO nwart ; ; 


U.S. Cities 


Wtt Pint Aiiroe, NY l « B2; PL 
Am Interested 

K i 


Buffalo 60 

Burlmglon .... 59 

Casper 49 

Charleston, S.C. 71 
Charleston W V. 69 


■ww- .an. 
Low High tatton di<w 


AuSKn -- 
BvlHmore 
Billinas . 


75 

.01 

PI. ddy. 

94 


Fair 

90 


Fair 

56 

ii 

Rain 

83 


Tstrms. 

Bf 


PI. ddy. 

7F 


Showers 

95 


Clear 


Birmingham ,'28 91 JD 


»sr election. 


wooden structure where the Boise . 


jpother purpose of the May-' people were praying. 


Boston 

Brownsville — 


50 SO J| Stawere 

« s * as 


Charlotte 63 

Chrmnne ... 52 

Chicago 64 

Cincinnati .. . C? 
Cleveland 63 

Columbia. SC. tt 
Columbus, Oh. 65 
DaUn-FI. Worth :S 

Davton 65 

Denvrr 55 

Dn Moines ... t? 
Odroit 63 

Oulirtn 41 

EiPesn . ... 54 

Farm 46 

Flaestall .... 39 
Great Falls ... 53 

Hartford 69 

Helena S3 

Honolulu .. — U 


.02 Pt. cldy. 
.29 Fair 
.. PI. ddy. 

Pt. ddy, 
.12 Tsmns. 

. . Tstrps 
. Pt. ddv. 
.06 Fair 
.74 Shuwem 
.48 Showers 
Pi ddy. 
.92 Tstrms 
JO Pair 
■T2 Showers 
. Sunnr 
. . Sunny 
.. Pt. Ctov. 

.. Pi. emy. 

Vi. ddy. 
Pt. ddy. 
.. Winflr 
Tstrms 
.02 C'owtfy 


Ja*son 
Jacfcsonvtlle 
Kansas City 

Las Vnu .. 

LitH* Rod: .. 
Los Angelas 
Louisville 
Manama .... 
Miami Beach 


70 83 1.66 

75 91 m 

79 KT .is 


Mldland-ooessa 68 97 


. 53 m 3A T^rms 

n.dd«. 


m 


MMwautee ... 62 
Mate, -St. Paul - S3 
Nashville ... 71 
Nev Orleans .. 75 

New Yorfc 73 

Horioll. ... 66 
North Plafto . 48 
Oklahoma City . *7 

firiaha 6l 

Orlando 73 

Philadtlohij . . £9 

Pnowiy 76 

Pittsburgh . .. 65 
Port ant. Me 62 

PdftHrtd, Or. .. 55 
Prevldwvo 64 

Raleigh 64 

fiinldCIty . ..53 
RBW 44 


62 S9 

SS 78 

71 89 .62 

75 93 

73 B9 47 

66 91 

48 76 45 

67 95 .CD 

61 81 


RichmoRfl .... 64 


.09 Showers 
Tstrms 
.. Sunny 
.. Windy 
Fair 
.. Fair 
1.66 PI. cldy. 
43 Fair 
.15 Tstrms 
Fair 
Sunny 

.. Pt. cldy. 
■62 Pt. cldy. 

• Pt ddr. 
47 Rain . 

Pt. cldy. . 
45 Pt. dar. 
■CD Sunny • 
.. Pt. ddy. 
PL ddy. 
Shwrs 
□ear 
41 Shvrs 
.. Fair . 

49 Showers 
Pt. ddy. 

.. PI. Mr. 

.. Sunny 
.. Pt. ridv. 

Tstorms. 
-25 Sunny - l ' 


St. Prbg.-Tamn 75 
5»ll Late Ctty . 59 
SanAntonto ... 75 
San Diego — 9 
San FrandKA . 57 
SaoH Ste. -Marie 38 

Seattle 57 

Shreveport .... 68 
Sioux Falls .... 50 
Srdcanf ...... 57 

SyraciS* o2 

Tyson 73 

Tulsa 67 

Wasningtan . . 71 

Whhila ..64 


Pt. ddy. 
Sunny 
.. Cieer 
Fair 

Pt. cldy. 

Clear 

Cloudy 

.Di Pt. ddr. 
. Sunny 
Tstorms. 
.70 Pt. ddy. 
Claar. 
Sunny 
Tstorms. 
.. Sunny 


tHBOWTCiH Hrtl'CM 

SHIP YOUR CAR! 


LOST: GoM Money Ole wftdd 
Vicinity of BHtmoro tWel I 
— tlraanial rains. Reward 661 h 
— $ 182 Mro. Haber. ' 


CALIF, FLORIDA. ALL USA l OVERSEAS FOUND— TABBYj 

LIC ICC » OFFICES INSURED S3 MILLION A) iU ^ mar™** WA. 

AAACON AUTO All Gas Pain »»™ '*»■ ^ friw Yt 

?U) 3544777. N.Y.C. !M WEST 41# ST -111!: 1 & 

(XI) 420-1133. NEW JERS5V 

12121 793-8300, QUEENS, 113-25 Oro Shrd 


(516) 2924IU. LI HEMPSTEAD, 175 Fulton 
|9U) 761-7*1. WESTCHESTER. SO CON*. 


In tw following Canadian dllK. ten. 
pera tores and prerinltaiion are tor a 
74-hour oetioo Hided al 7 P.M. E.S.T; 
the condition is yesterday's wsathar. 


INSURED AUTO SHIPPERS 

INSURED FOR COLLISION I LIABILITY 


CLASSEFI 

ADVEFTISIiVG 


TO CALIF., FLORIDA, All Sales *** 


Calgary 54 77 

Edmonlpq ... 49 77 

Montreal 57 7J 

Ottawa 55' 70 

Resin* - 48 8f 

Toronto 52 70 

Vancouver ..... 59 7? 
Winnipeg 45 81 


.30 dear 
Pt. ddy. 
.17 Pi. ddy. 

PI. Mr. 
... Gear 
. . Pt. ddy. 

. Ctev 
... Cl tar 


ALL GAS PAID— 947-5230— I.CC J [j 

DEPENDABLE. CAR TRAVEL 130 W. 43 SI. T4 Auto Exchange 
NEW JERSEY CALL (201) 672-3044 14 Boats 

ewT K Bus. Opo'IIc* 


Leaving Am. 27 or JO etch. Trenw. cUm Training 

Call John 582-1989 lStoST<5to 

G.F.S enMoraK today ttfotoe In com- S Ottw Pdt* 
raemorating another A.O. birthday and «x- J Help Warned •• 
tend thalr Moved V.P. all best wtaftts. 44 Lost 1 Found 


• K M« 
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1 irS V 1 - ’ * ;* _i Mr C* T* T ■ a n v A* ^ - nr I v rv nn i mn nrr nm 



Tgg //gW YPftg TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 19% 




'--i 


— . ‘ i 



ABC and NBC Weigh Talks 


in Presidential Race 


Tfco Hb» Yortt ThneS/MsaJ Bund 


i\li. S. Holloman Jr* president of the dty’s Health and Hospitals Corporation, 
: - • to ^be rts, ^iwSarte director of District Council 37 of the nonmedical hospital 
, separately at the Hilton Hotel for negotiatfonswith city -officials. 


from Page - 1, Cd 1 


■and said that- no 
-er -had been pre- 
•, He . added that it 
ible but not prob- 
the strike could !be 
ore -the night was i 


Issues in Hospital Strike 


' State officials have 
■iy insisting that hos- 
■■ must be held down, 
ion officials had.ex- 
' « up to the last min-: 
eher; rates. to help 
least some layoffs 
.new- rates weer dis- 
they at least re- 
iy element of uncer- 


Or k 


. and I can now be- 
. foliate, ” said Victor 
he executive direc- 
'~'\:ict Councfl 37, just 
’ft-ior'theJlilton. - 


L lt\ £f louncement of lower 


»» ■ 








C&- 


- plicated the prob- 
p: Gotbaiim said, "but, 
U £ put .everything bp] 
1 We' never could 1 
before because that 
r was hanging over 
... .. Now we have the 
ifined. We don’t like 


■ 

ifcWi v 

#'-i vi-r - 

m- - 


ton, but’ at least we 

ie7< 


for negotiation, 
is -been tfomo: crit- 
ic state -for taking 
come up; -with the 


PARTICIPANTS: About 18,000 nonprofessional hospi- 
tal workers, members of Local 420. American Federation of 
1 State/ 'County- and Municipal Employees, are on strike 
against New York City’s Health and Hospitals Corporation, 

• which^ runs the 16 municipal hospitals. Most of .the em- 
. ployees are nurses’ aides and dietary and janitorial Workers:' 

ISSUES: The union Is protesting the city’s plan to lay 
off 1,350 workers as recommended last week by a task 
force, appointed to study the dispute. .Last October the city 
laid off 3,000 hospital workers and the union did not pro- 
- test. But when plans to dismiss .3,150 more were announced 
in May, the union threatened to strike,. arguing that im- 
proved management by the Htealth and Hospitals Corpora- 

• tion- would save the necessary money. • 

A compromise wis worked out whereby the union 
would agrfee to- 832 of the first 1,450 layoffs, but that left 

• 1,700 still in dispute. ■ ' ’ * 1 * 

In June an ad hoc panel, headed by Basil A. Paterson, 
said it could npt.sort .through .".‘the welter of conflicting 
cla ims ” and' recommended that a tripartite task force seek 
“to determine potential alternatives to layoffs.” 

The task. force was headed by Martin Horwitz, a busi- 
. ness executive, and included Deputy Mayor Paul Gibson Jr. 

; and. Dr: John L. S.' Holloman Jr., president of the Health 
and Hospital Corporation. Meantime, the city argued that 
because of the delays it now had to dismiss 2,120 people 
instead of 1,700. The task force recommended the 1,350 
dismissals, which the union now is striking against, in an 
action that violates-a state law prohibiting strikes by pub- 
lic employees. . 


iy is that this 
two months 




; lotbavm -said; ."We^eteymined that, 
avoided all this up- 


:. !i rials said they ptrt j 
l as soon as they 




¥***>?• ■■ 

■ 

MR*# 

- 




rn: 


v 


_ .they could have} 
- v months ago my- 
. : Paul Elston, state 
. . tor of the budget 
go through a coni- 
> ^methodology this 
'. Id down hospital 
serializes hospitals 
ing and using too 
sive services.” 
n said the - state 
j: to consider every) 
.ed by the city, 
we. would consider 


rnber Set Up - 
iicafcAid Calls 



mm : 

[■ v 

. . -/Dr's Emergenqr 

' Comtnittee set 

* '-al control carter 


' rails -about -ined^ - 


- during the strike. 


teris -number is 


^>11 calls for ambn- 


- fever, are. to be 

- ■ 

.the- regular 911 


number, the May- 

ip ' '' 

.-said. 

i _■ 


/he said, “but we 

R«nSa. V • 

*“ ; W not. change our 


This will not be a 


■ rtiira." : 


,. .iew~rates.-were.an~ 

. a. city’s, municipal 


•f**' ' 

r * v: 

^ a'** • 


t, y.- . -> 
t+t-'y 

- : 


aE.bben operat- 
• uniform reimburse 1 
0 per phtierit 
- rMedfcaid, .which" 
-■al ' costs- lor ' the 




*• 


if 


■ -schedule from the. 
(dividual . rates: for 
that tiifrcS^ -caP 
.M average*; out to 
^a_.day,, although 


isome hospitals would receive 
more than the 4>ld; rate and 
[some less. By their, own. calcu- 
lations city hospital officials 
led that they jaeedecl a| 
rate .of $3U6.68 this ' year to 
,00011006 their services,' winch 
go mainly' to the - poor. • 

The ' city - officials - said the 
new rates, .would mean a 
further .reduction, of $21 mil- 
lion, to -323 miiypn in the hos-J 1 
pitals’.inpwthe, and necessitate^ ' 
another; l^qO'td. 3,000 payoffs. 

The strike by the.-union, made 
up mostly of nurse’s aides, jani- 
torial and food service workers, 
began last Wednesday morning 
over file issue. Of 1,350^ layoffs 
the q'ity said it. had. to make 
because of budget restrictions.. 
This was .before the new rates' 
came -put. .- - t 

- 'Hie union, which bad ac- 
[cepted. cuts earlier in the fiscal, 
crisis, refused to ■ accept any 
more Iqyo^i and struck on that 
iSisue. ." •>... 

. Union leaders - went . into ■ the] 
HSlton negotiations yesterday 
standing firm on . no mote lay- 
offs. Insisting that cuts could 
be made tiuough more effirieot 
management-. ' . • •. 

MpreXayo^ Vpvred; ; _/ 
But Dr. John L. S. HoHoman 
|Ir^ the^ president of tbe city^s 
Health, ■and; Hospitals Corpora- 
tion* said, tiie .new' rates “win 
definitely force . new -layoffs/' 
Tito newr rates’ set> by the 
state drew sharp criticism from 
the Health. Systems Agency of 
New -York City, which > is 
h.by Federai few -with 
. ing: a. rational health de- 
livery plan in the city. - ■ . . 

' In a letter to Governor Carey, 
Joseph Ti Lynaugh; the inde- 
pendent agency's.' executive di- 
rector, said the new “rate struc- 
ture violates the ^nmciide- of 
[equitable . treatment” 

. “While JVIpdicaid rates in thqj_ 
[private] voluntary gnd piqpri- 
etajcy, sectors' were jmcreased 


an average 6.5 polerit, w ' ; hb 
wrote,, “the [city hospital cor- 












Roberts 

Mandate Director, District Council 37: 

• discusses : 










... 


a 4 





T!* 1 


V 



ac 


on 


* ■%# •>- - 


£ 


NEWSMAKERS 

ijtrinel 2 Sunday, 12 Noon ; 


DC37AISCME.AFL-CIO-. : 

. ■. .MDSft'Sfew: '■■■-■.■ 


m 


poratioq rates showed.a decline 
of about 5 pereent” 

Mr. Lynaugh said ’’ a non- 
viable corporation would be a 
catastrophe” and “it is onpossi- 
ble to see bow [the hospital cor- 
poration]' can -sustain further 
budget cuts.lhat *w6u!d be ne- 
cessary to balance this loss of 
revenue and still be viable.” 
The strikers received new 
support yesterday from the un- 
ion representing 3,000 interns 
and residents at the municipal 
[hospitals. 

Dr. Jay Dobkin, president of 
the Committee of Interns and 
Residents,, stud “we support 
the aims of the strikers.” 

He urged Es ^members, to 
join picket' lines when off duty 
and to refuse admission to 
nonemergency patients. 

Referring- to the -Medicaid 
cuts, Dr. Dobkin said “there 
will be nothing left resembling 
decent medical care for those 
people; wh o by ah admissions 
have no place else to go.” 

The 5,500 registered nurses 
hr the municipal hospital sys- 
tem ' also have /remained at 
work during the ' strike, .some 
of- them doing, -work that 
.would- have - been done by 
strikers. ** '■ 

The New York Nurses A*? 
sociation, : which represents 
[the municipal hospital nurses, 
said its-. members were work- 

ling under, a Ipplfcy in which 
they • perform-- . their nonnal 
making . functions but do -not 
accept the ' “assignment of 
duties ' normally “ dis charged by; 
the. nommrse personnel unless 
a- itiear mid present danger to 
patients exists." 


3 Die as Sehobl Bus Fails 
Off Creek Bridge in Iowa 


' 'NEOLA, Iowa,' Aug. 6 (AP>— 


A school -bos- crashed -through 
id upside 


ia bridgfi_rail and .landed upsi 
down in the cree k 25 ffeet be- 
low, inning three ■ children and 


By LES BROWN 
ABC and NBC have said 
they will! televise a series of 
four debates • between the 
Democratic and Republican 
candidates; for President and 
Vice President which the 
League of Women Voters will 
arrange this fall if the candi- 
dates agree to participate. 

•CBS' is . withholding a de- 
rision until it is able to study 
the leagued proposed format 
for the debates, but the net- 
work meanwhile has also ap- 
pealed to Congress to suspend 
the equal-time rule for political 

candidates to allow television 
to set up its own debates with- 
out having to rely on an inter- 
mediary. 

It was- such a suspension by 
Congress - that made possible 
the so-called “Great Debates” 
of 1960 between John F. Ken- 
nedy and Richard M. Nixon; 
which all three networks pro- 
duced jointly and covered 
simultaneously. 

The equal-time rule — Sec- 
tion 315 of the Communica- 
tions Act — requires radio and 
television to provide equivalent 
time for all fringe candidates 
whenever they give exposure 
to a major party’s candidate, 
except in legitimate news re^ 
ports. 

Under a new interpretation 
of the rule earlier this year by 
the Federal Communications 
Commission, debates by- the 
major-party candidates are con- 
sidered bona fide news events, 
open for coverage by the net- 
works, if they are conducted 
outside the television studios 
by independent organizations 
not associated with broadcast- 
ing. 

Taking advantage of that in- 
terpretation, the League of 
Women Voters has made a spe- 
cial project of arranging face- 
tb-face debates between the 
Republican and Democratic 
candidates to be held between 
Sept 25 and Oct 25. Three of 
the debates are to involve the 
Presidential candidates, and 
one is to be between those run- 
ning for Vice President 

The league announced this 
week the appointment of three 
co-chairmen for the project 
Newton N. Minow, who had 
been chairman of the F.C.C. 
during the Kennedy Adminis- 
tration; Rita E. Hauser, 
former United States delegate 
to the United Nations who, had 
also been co-chairman of the 
Committee for the Re-election 
of the President in 1972; and 
Charles E. Walker, a former 
deputy secretary of the Treas- 
ury in the Nixon Administration. 

“This is the first presidential 
election in which the American 
public is footing the major can- 
didates’ bills through public 
financing," said Ruth C. Clusen, 
chairman of the league's edu- 
cation fund. ‘This fact should 
lead the candidates to be more 
accountable to voters in pro- 
viding solid information on 
where they stand. Presidential 
debates will help us achieve 
that goal.’’ 

Children’s TV Workshop 
Plans Adult Series 

The ■ Children’s Television 
Workshop, which produces 
“Sesame Street,” has obtained 
$4.2 million from three sources 
to finance the production of 
a T dra m atic public television 
series for adults. While fiction- 
al, the series, “The Best of 
Families,” is to represent a 
social history of the 1880-1900 
period in the- United States. 

■ When it was conceived, the 
series- waa to have been a 
Bicentennial- offering, but de- 
lays in securing the fi nan c in g 
for it has postponed its avail- 
ability to the Public Broad- 
casting Service to the fall of 
next year. 

The amount raised, 1 however, 
failg short of. .the $6 million 
[budget that had originally been 
projected for the series. As a 
result, the project has been 
scaled down to nine episodes 
from the 13 that had initially 
been planned. 

The 54.2 million came from 
the National Endowment for 
the Humanities,' the Corpora- 
tion for Public. Broadcasting 
and the Mobil OD Corporation. 

The. scripts'are to be written 
by Loring Mandel, Ernest Kincy 
and other noted ^television, play- 
wrights and will involve fic- 
tional people from differing 
social, economic and ethnic 
backgrcHmds. Most of the epi- 
sodes are to be produced in 
New York City. 

CBS Is Planning. 

[New Talk Show "• 

Jeanne. Parr, ' a CBS news 
[correspondent, will begin a 



45- 


Television 


Morning 


fcM <4>Agriculture. UAA. 

CM (4) Across the Fence 
&8Q (2)1978 Sommer Semester* 

(4) Vegetable ’Soup, 

. (5)Pattems for Living 
(7) News 

7to0 (2) Patchwork Family" . 
-.(4)Zoorama_CR) 
(SjUndentog 
(7)Hot Fudge .- ' 
7:30(4) Mr. Magoo 

(5) Dermis the Menace ■ 

. (7)Salty 

(9) News 

(IDCarrascoIendas 


(1J) Crockett’s Victory Gar- 
den ' . 


8*0 (8) Pebbles 

Bamm 


and Unmm 


4: 


(4) Emergency ■ Plus 
Animated 

(5) The Flints Loras 
(7) Hong Kong Fbooey 
(9}Newark and Reality 
(ll)Apienda Ingles 
(13) Sesame Street (R) 

&30 (2) Bugs Bunny-Roadmnner 

(4) Jose and the Pussycats 

(5) The Brady Bunch 
(7)Tom and Jerry 

(9) Connecticut Report 
(11) Insight 

M0 (4) Secret Lives of Waldo 
Kitty 

(5) Partridge Family 
(9) Wanted: Dead or Alive 
(ll)Word of Life 
(13)Electric Company (R) 
9-JO (2)Scooby-Doo 

(4) Pink Panther Show 

(5) Bewitched 

17) New Adventures of 

G illigan • 

(9) Movie: 'The Man Who 
Turned to Stone" (1957). 
Vicfo Joiy, Charlotte Au- 
stin. This dog is really 
stoned out. 

(il)It Is Written 
(13)Mister Rogers (R) 
10.-00 (2)Shazam/lsis 

(4) Land of the Lost 

(5) The Monkees 
(7) Super Friends 
(ll)Ezecutrve Woman 
(13) Sesame Street (R) 

10:15 (ll)One Woman's New 
YoTte: Donald Trump, guest 
10:30 (4)Run, Joe, Run 

(5)Movfe: "Fort Worth" 
(1951). Randolph Scott, 
David Brian. Same old 
stuff 

(11) Friends of Man 
11 KM) (2) Far Out Space Nuts 

(4)Retum to the Planet of 
the Apes 
<7)Speed Buggy 
(9) Movie: “Operation Paci- 
fic" (1957). John Wayne, 
Patricia Neal, Ward Bond. 
The Navy and pancake-flat 
(ll)Movie: “Follow the 
Leader” (19441 The East 
Side Kids. You'll be sorry 
(13)The Electric Company 
. ®) • 
11-30 (2)Ghost Busters 
<4)Westwind 


Joe Venuti is one of the musicians on u At The Top/* 
- a tribute to Bix Beiderbeck, CK, 13, 10:30 PM. 

1:00 P.M. Old Timer’s Day Classic 

01) 

8:00 P.M. Monty Hall 

- (?) 

8:00 P.M. Miss Black America Pageant 

C11) 

8:00 P.M. The Men Who Made the Movies fR'l (131 

11:30 P.M. Weekend 

(4) 


see 


(7) The Odd Ball Couple 
(13) Mis 


(lSIMiater Rogers (R) 


Afternoon 


12to0 (2)Valley of the Dinosaurs 
. (4) The Jetsons 
(5) Soul Train 
(7)The Lost Saucer 
(Il)Movie: "Night of the 
- Blood Beast” (1958). John 
Baer, Mach ad Emmett, An- 
gela Greene. An outer-space 
hook-up, literally. 

( 13) Zoom (R) 

12*0 (2) Fat Albert. 

(4) Go — USA (R) 

(7) American Bandstand: 
Fenny Marshall, Cindy 
Greco 

(13)Hodgq>odge Lodge 
(R) . 

1.-00 (2) Children’s Film Festi- 
val: “The Camerons" (R) 

(4) . Spirit of *76: Oscar 
Brand, host. “Washing- 
ton’s Troubles” 

(5) Movie: “The Haunted 
Strangler” (1958). Boris 
Karloff, Anthony Dawson. 


All, right, If you 
through the cobwebs 
(9) •MOVIE: “Saturday’s 
Hero” (1951). John Derek, 
Donna Reed. Firm, health- 
ily cynical little drama of 
poor boy, football scholar- 
ship, temptation. Neat job. 
(If) •OLD' TIMER'S DAY 
CLASSIC 

(lS)Sesame Street (R) 

I£0 (4) Sports Challenge (R) 
(7) Movie: ‘The Golden 
Treasure” (196t>- Titin 
Georges, Miiou Wilson 
2.-00' (2) wEYE ON: “A Conver- 
- sation with David Mer- 
rick” <R) 

(4) Grandstand 

(11) • BASEBALL: Yankees 
vs. Baltimore Orioles (time 
approximate)' 

(13) Mister Rogers (R) 

£15 (4) • BASEBALL: Phila- 

delphia Phillies at SL Louis 
Cardinals 

2&0 (3) Channel 2 the' People: 
“Scott Joplin” _ 

(5) Hitchcock Presents 
(IS) Sesame Street (R) 

3dM (2)Movie: “Thunder Over 
the Plains” (1953). Ran- 
dolph Scott, Lex Barker. 
Chnl War, bit above aver- 
age. 

(5) One Step Beyond 
(9)Movle: “Back to Ba- 
taan” <1945). John Wayne, 
Anthony Q uinn 

3:30 (5) Movie: “Shetlock 

Holmes and the Voice of 
Terror” <1942). Basil Rath- 
bone. Nigel Bruce. Nazi 
saboteurs in Britain. Thins 
out disappointingly. 
(7)Amnwl World: “Wapiti'’ 
<13)Big Blue Marble CR) 
4:00 (7)The Coral-Jungle: Leon- 
ard Nimoy, narrator. “The 
Hungry Sea” 

(13) Sesame Street (R) 
(31)Nbva 

4^0 (2) Sports Spectacular; 
Volvo Tennis Tournament, 
semi-finals 

-(ll)Abbott and Costello 
5dW (4) •SPEAKING FREELY: 
Dr. Fred Bde. director. 

. United States Arms Con- 
trol and Disarmament 


Anima- 


Dotvn- 


Ua 


(5) Miss ion impossible 
(9) Racing From Saratoga: 
The Whitney Handicap 
(li)Star Trek 
(13) International 
• tion Festival (R). 

(21, 50) Upstairs, 
stans (R) 

(251Inner Tennis 
(41)SIempre Habra 
Manana 
(47)Tribupa Del Pueblo 
6^0 (2) CBS News: Dan Rather 
(4)NBC News: Tom Bro- 
kaw 

(7)ABC News: Ted Koppel 
(9) N.FX. Championship 
(I3)Crocketfs Victory 
Garden (R) 

(25) Antiques 
(31) Inner Tennis 
(47) La Comunidad En 

Marcha 
7.-00 (2)News 

(4) New York El ust rated: 
'Tennis Everyone?" <R) 

(5) •MOVIE: “Petrified 

Forest" (1936). Humphrey 
Bogart, Bette ' Davis, Les- 
lie Howard.' Dated, but 
that star electricity still 
on. full current 

(7) •PEOPLE PLACES 
AND THINGS: “Strugale 
for Dignity.” Homes for re- 
tarded children (R) 

- (9) • BASEBALL: Mels vs. 
Pittsburgh Pirates 
(ll)Space: 1999 <R) 

( IS) •AGRONSKY AND 
COMPANY 

(21) WaC Street Week 

Week in 


dolph Churchill (R) 

. . (4i)Graa Teatro 

(50) Evening at Pops (R) * 

(68)Yugosiav Hour 
9^0 (2)Doe (R) 

(4) Movie: “There Was a - 
Crooked Man" (1970). . 
Henry Fonda. Kirk Doug- 
las. Burgess Meredith. 
Anyway, flinty 

(5) Movie: “The Horrible 

Dr. Hitchcock” (1984). - 
Barbara Steele, Rudolph 
Fleming. -, r r, 

(21) Jennie: Lady Ran- ^ 

dolph ChurchinlR) •*.. : 

9:00 (2) • MARY TYLER 1 - 
MOORE SHOW (R) 

(7) •MOVIE: “On a Clear 
Day You Can See .For- 
ever" <1970). Barbra 
Streisand, Jack Nicholson, 
Yves Montand 
(IS, 50) Movie: “Dr. Ma- 
base, King of Crime” Ru- 
dolph Klem-Rogge 
(31) Masterpiece Theater . 

• (R) ' * 

(47)Raideen t ‘ 

(88)Thy Kingdom Come 
9£0 (2)«BOB NEWHART ’ 
SHOW (R) 

(ll)Hee Haw: George 

Jones, - Sunday Sharpe, (- 
guests, (R) 

(21) At the Top 
(47)Jagaimo (Potato) 

(68) Arab World 

10:00 (2) • FOOTBALL: Dallas 

Cowboys vs. Los Angeles ^ 
Rams "- • 

(5)News 

(31) Upstairs, Downstairs 
(41) Boxing . ~ 

(68) Eleventh Hour 
10^0 (5) Black News 


t9)The Champions: T Bel'... 
Banihana Grand Prix from - 
New Jersey; The National 
Synchro Swim 
Duet Championships; A « 
Look Back at Ron Clrtrke • 
(11, 47) News 

U3)«AT THE TOP: “A - 
Tribute to Bix Beider- n 
be eke." Marian McPart- " 
land, guest 

(5D)The Men Who Made - 
the Movies (R) 

10^5 (47)Nfews from Japan' 

10:50 (47) New Golf Lesson ‘ 
UdO (4)News 

(5) Hitchcock Presents > 
(Il)The Honeymooners * -f. 
(47)Genroku — Taiheiki ■ ‘ v. 
11^0 (4) •WEEKEND: A visits 
to Sun City, “Shangri-la" 


retirement community in ^ 
the 'Arizona desert; Pack-): 


'sex tours”; 'Report 
“ " Cart*"? 


(25) Washington 
Review 


Agency, guest (R) 

(nr 


>)Big Valley 

(7) Wide World of Sports: 
United States vs. Soviet 
Union track and field meet 
(O)UJ.O. '5 

(11)F Troop 

. (13) The Olympiad: “The 
Australians" (R) 

(31) Black Perspective 
5&0 (11) Supersonic The Su- 
preme?, Leo Sayer, Chris' 


(31) At the Top 


Evening 


CbOO (2) World of Survival 

(4)Kukla, Fran and OUie 
(R) 


(31)On the Job 

(4I)01ga Y Tony 

(47) Lo Mejor-De! Cine Es- 

panol 

- (50)Express Yourself IR) 
(68>Turidsh Hour 

7S0 (2) Channel 2 Eye on 
(4)Price Is Right <R) 

(7) High Rollers 
(1 3) Inside Albany 
(2DL.L World 
(25) USA: -People and Poli- 
tics 

(31)Casper Citron . Inter- 
views 

(50) Black Perspective on 
the News 

fldlO (2)The Jefiersons '(R) 

•' (4)Adventurizing with the 
Chopper: Comedy -pilot. 
Harrison . Page, Antonio 
Fargas. Black private eye . 
employed by racketeers 
(7) •MONTY HALL’S VA- 
RIETY HOUR: C Ion's Leach- 
man, Edward Asner, Minnie 
Riperton, Shields and 
YaxneU, guests 
(11) • MISS BLACK AMER- 
ICA PAGEANT: Adam 

Wade, host" (Videotaped) 
(13) • THE MEN WHO 
MADE THE MOVIES: Vin- 
cente Minnelli (R) 

(21) Washington Week in 
Review 

(51) Jenfiie: Lady Ran- 


on two young North 
lina brothers convicted of ,5 
kidnapping 

(5)Movle: “The Horror. atr>. 
Party Beach” (1964). John . 
Scott, Alice Lyon. Ghastly ' 
(7)News 

(9) Racing From’ Yonkers: 
Cane Prep and Tarry-town 
Free-For-All Pace. 
(13)Movie: “Tempest” 

(1928). John Barrymore ' 
(ll)The Buns and Alien * 
Show 

(68) Max Morris * 

12:00 (7) O V I E: ”Lisa” i 

(1962). Dolores Hart, • 
Stephen Boyd- Hugh Grif-- - 
fith, Marius Goring. Un- 
commonly colorful, en- ‘ 
grossing adventure-drama 
of fugitive Jewish girl and - 
her helper 

(9) •SOCCER: Cosmos vs. ’ 
San Jose Earthquakes ... 

(ll)Movie: “Only_ the^ 


Cool” (1972). Lilli Palmer; 

Michel- 


Stephanie Audran, Miche 
Constantin. A sleuthing . 
mix-up 

(68) Nancy Hannon Spe- ' 
dal 

140 (2) News 

(4) Movie: “The Million- 
airess” (1961). Sophia Lo- 
ren, Peter Sellers. George • 
Bernard Pshaw, tilted to- ■ 
ward Minsky ^ 

1:15 (5)»DON KDtSHNER’S « 
ROCK CONCERT: 10 CC. •. 
Ramsey Lewis, Johnny ‘ 

• Rodriguez, guests 
1^10 (2)Movie: “Two Sistea . . 

From Boston” (1946). 
June Allyson, Kathryn 
Grayson. Exactly what''> 
you’d expea ■. i 

2to0 (9) News 

2fi0(7)News ■ 

2:45 (5)The Saint >3 

3:43 (2) News t—9 

3d>5 (2) Movie: “An American s 
Romance” (1944). Brian'- 
Donleyy, Walter Abel, ' : 
Ann Richards. And a bore. 
One man's family over the 

lt aarc 


Radio 


CaJl-in (real estate, finance). 
10:30-10:55, WNYC-AM - Tennage 
Book Talk. Ruth Hausen, host 
Alice Fleming, author of “New 
on the Beat.” 


6-9 AJt, WQXR. Violin Concer- 
to No. 2, Paganini; Symphony 
No. 75, Haydn; Overture to An- 
odante. Handel; Adagio and Pas- 
torale from The Creatures of Pro- 
metheus, Beethoven; Flagstaff, 
Elgar; La Peri, Dukas; Allegro 
from Serenade for Strings, Suk; 
Evening Reverie from Suite Al- 


genezme, 

iron 


Saint-Saens: Queen 

England of Elizabeth, 


tito lowa Highway Patrol sal 
The bos was carrying chil- 
dren and Jheir supervisors 
from Nedla, . in western Iowa, 
to .-swtonmhg-ile&ons at a pool 
in Avoca, 22 miles away. It was 

not immediately known how; _ . . _ 

many people, -were on the hns.'daily talk and interview p to- 



Frcficb institute 
Alliance Francaise 

22 L €0 SL N.Y. ' 644-1820 


- PACEUWVERSrTY 

mimssim ctim&eESi 

- . Sept t — Pteasaritvflte 

(914) 769-3788. . 

Sopt S— White Plains 
. (914)9494494 
u Sep£ 17 — N.Y.Cfty' 
(212)285-3323 


gram on . WCBS-TV this fall, 
“With Jeasme Parr.” The pro- 
gram is to-be carried from £30 
to 10 AIM. " 

Miss Parr has had a daily 
radio series 'on' the' CBS net- 
work and £as been host of 
“N.FX." Questions,” tt sports 
'feature designed - for women 
and preceding the CBS National 
Football League telecasts. She 
lis also' the author of 'Super-, 
(wives,"- a collection of inter- 
views with the wives of leading 
athletes: 

. At the same time, WCBS-TV 
announced that Bess Myerson, 
former New York City Com- 
missioner for Consumer Affairs, 
will be- host and commentator 
for a series of specials next 
season dealing with significant 
issues in New York, New Jer- 
sey and Connecticut. 


cool; green, camp, kids 

SUPPORT THE FRESH AIR FUN 0 


m The 
Will lams. 

7:30-1030, WKCR-FM. Mlssa Se 

La Face ay Pale, Dufay; Concer- 
to in D, Mozart; r^harmnng Villa- 
ises. Poulenc; Kosmogonia, 
deredd. 

9.06-10. WQXR: Plano Personali- 
ties. Piano Sonata No. 27, Bee- 
thoven; Images, Book H, Debus- 
sy- 

KhOS-U, WNCN. Ondine, Debus- 
sy; Sonc, Wolf; Seven Varia- 
tions on God Save the King. Bee- 
thoven; Cello Sonata in F, Bee- 
thoven. 

10:06-12, WQXR: Saturday Pops 
Concert. Symphony No. 8, Schu- 
bert; Cello Concerto in B flat; 
Boccherini, 

11 - lift WNYC - PM: Young 
American -Artists. 92nd Street - 
YMHA School of Music. 
lltoS-Noon, WNCN. Battle Cry 
!of Freedom, Gottschalk; Country 
Fair, Mayer; A Pagan. Poem. 
Loeffler, Symphony No. 3, Har-< 
ris. 

1.-06-2 P3L. WQXR: Frontiers 
of Sound. Classical Quadraphon- 
ic Recording. The Three-Cornered 
Hat; ExcexptSi Falla, - • - 

i05-5, WNCN. Motets: Gaudent 
hi Coelis: O Magnum Mysterium; 
Ave Mans; Ascendens Christas, 
Victoria; Mandolin Coacerto in 
G^HummeL, 

230-&30, WNYC-FM. Brooklyn 
College Orchestra, Robert Hick- 
ok, conductor. Overture to A . 
Midsummer Night’s Dream. Men- 
delssohn; Symphony No. 5, 
(Tchaikovsky, 

3d>6-5, WQXR: Panorama. Mac-, 
beth Overture, Fry, The Tem-r 
(pest, Paine; Violin Concerto in 
A minor, Dvorak. 

3304, WKCR-FM. String Quar- 
tet in C, Schubert; Concertino 
for Chamber Players, Sessions; 
Sonata for Four French Homs, 
Hindemith. 


4 South American Songs tor 
Chorus a cappalia, Genzmer; Re- 
quiem for Soprano and 6 Instru- 
ments, Barbe. 

C-7SB, WNYC-FM The Berlin 
Radio Choir and Orchestra. Rob- 
ert Han ell conducting. Works by 
Mozart. Rossini, Bellini, Verdi, 
and others. 

7-&30, WNYC- AM: The Lively 
Arts. Age of Gold Polka, Shos- 
takovich; Sleeping Beauty Waltz, 
r. Petal 


Tchaikovsky; Petrushka, Stravin- 


sky; Symphony No. Saint- 
r, Divertin 


Saens; Divertimento, Fran calx. 
9*6-11, WQXR: Philadelphia Or- 
chestra. Franz Alters, conductor. 
The Merry Widow, Lehar. 
9&Q-4k55, WNYC-FM: Jazz Re- 
visited. Ellington Nicknames. 
Compositions, celebrating nick- 
names and puns of Ellington 

baud members. 

Midnight-1 AJHL, WKCRi Cajun 
Music. With Paul Aaron, host 


1206-1 AJVL, WQXR. Concerto 

Grosso In E, LocateDl; Diverti- 
mento in E flat, Mozart; Saxo- 
phone Concerto, Koch. 


11-11:30, WNYC- AM: A Look at 
Ourselves. “Famous American 
Women" (Part I). 

1D30-2 PJH* WNYC- AM: 

Shakespeare Matinee. The Dub- 
lin Gate Players production of 
“Henry VHL” 

1:05, WMCA: Old Timers Day 
Baseball Classic. 

2, WMCA: Baseball Yankees vs. 
Baltimore. 

3-4, WNYC- AM: Options. “Amer- 
ica, Britain and the Common 
Law.” 

3:30-3*5, WNYC-FM: Speaking 
of Dance. Lee Edward Stem, 
host Ulysees Dave of the 1 Alvin 
Alley Dance Company. 

4*5, WNYC- AM: First Chapter. 
Richard Pyatt reads the first 

chapter of ‘The Sirius Mystery," 
by Robert K.G. Temple. 

4rf)5-5, WOR-AM; • Mystery 
Theater. “Overnight to Free- 
dom," with William Redfield. 

4394:55, WNYC-FM: The 

Young Bflnaleian. Sahan . Arzruni, 
host Louise Talma, composer 
(Part I). - “ 


9^0-9:55. WNYC- AM: Special 
Report. Paul Roman interview?' 
Nick Tate, a performer on the.- 
television series: “Space: 1999." ‘ 

10- Midnight, WMCA: Best or^ 
Barry Gray. Discussion (R) 

11- Midnight WEAfc Maya An-i- 
gelon. Interview with the author - 
and poet 

Midnight- 1 AJUL, WOR-AM: ' 

Between the Covers. Heywood , 
Hale Broun, host. Interviews.' 

Midnights AJW, WMCA: Long - ' 
John Nabel and Candy Jraes.'"- 
Discnssion. " 1 


Midnight-5 AJYL. WBAL Radio v 
Unnameable. Taut, music, call- \c 


in, interviews. 


. o; 

IffidnightSaO. WWRL: The Ad-^) 1 
ventures of Party Hearty. With 
Gary Byrd. Comedy. - - p 


1-6 AJC, WOR-AM: Barry Far- 
her. Discussion. 


News Broadcasts - 1- 


ADNews: Wi 
on 


Talks, Sports, Events 


5, WMCA: Leon lewis. “Court 
Reform." • 


Wit 


4-438, WNYC-FM: 

Artists. Frank Martori. 


6^0-7 PJKU WQXR: Music, from 
Germany. David Berger, host 


5-7 AM, WBAIr The 
After the Night Before. 

Gary Fried. Talk, music, 

.5:15-10, WOR-AM: John Gamb- 
ling. Variety 

' 7:30-7:45, WNYC- AM: Children’s " 
Books, with Marilyn Iarusso. 
“Dabbling in Witchcraft" ' 
8-800. WNYC- AM: The World 
of - Children's Literature. With 
Barbara Rollock. “Hypnosis; The 
Wakeful Sleep,” by- Larry Kettel- . 
kamp. 

8*30; WNYC-FM.- Stories From 
Mary Xands. With Diane Wblk- 
stein. "Swedish Fairy Tales," by 
Helenfl. N yblon u * • 

&30-9, WEVD: Bicentennial. 

Bandwagon. -Merrill Joels, host. 
"Robert E. Lee, Road to Honor.” 
&30-&55, WNYOAM* The Won- 
derful World of PJVJU Kitty Kir- 

S , host “The Nutmeg Grinder," 

Lh the Police Athletic League 
Children’s Theater. 

9-Noon, WBAfc The Saturday 
Morning Show. Children’s pro- 
' grams, stories, music, comeqy. 
10-1 PM, WMCA: Sally Jessy- 
RaphaeL “Alternatives to Cof- 
. lege." , 

10:15-2, WOR-AM: • What's Your 
.Problems- With' Bernard- -M el tzer. 


5-6, WOR-AM: Mystery Theater. 
'The Covered Bridge," starring 
Jada Rowland CR). 


&30-5&5. WNYC-FM: Bands 
sross me S 


Across the Sea. Robert Russell, 
host Gaiy Steigerwalt, pianist. 
6-800. WNYCAM: A World at 
Stake.- With Robert Huffman. 
“How Journalists Interpret 
Others. 1 * 


,WINS,WNWS.,; 

WJL& WMCST W^C, 

WNEW-AM. WOR. WSOU. ' “ 
Five Minutes to the Hour WABC 
(also. five minutes to the half- 
honr). WNYC. WPDC WRFM. 
-Fifteen Minutes Past the Honn’ V 
WPU. WRVR. . i,i 

On the Half Hour WPAT.Tv 
WWDJ. WUR. WNBC. WMCA, ^ 
WVNJ. 

S30 oaly: WBAL . 


6.-05-8, 


WOR-AM: Blighty 

Mobile. Gany Moore, 
Bob Ma xwell , hosts. 

8'-50, WNEW-AM- Baseball. Mets 
at Pittsburgh Pirates. 

•7-S, WBAL Salad. Gardening. 

7- 8-30, WNYC- AM: The Lively 
Arts. William Wells, host. Ran- 
som Wilson, flutist 

8- 9, WEAL Marion's Cauldron. 
The occult, and magic. 

8:05-10, WOR-AM: Joe FrtnHin 
Show. A tribute_ to Mickey 
Roone\ 


WABC 
WADB 
WADO 
WAWZ 
WBAB 
WBAI 
. WBAY 
WBGO 
WBU 
WBLS 


AM FM 
770 


1380 99.1 
1033 
VS 
«0 HU 
- 88J 
106.1 


looney and Judy Garland. 

8^50-9 ^0, WNYC- AM: Comer 
Union Lecture'' Series-Critical 
Choice for Americans. Speaker: 
Dr. David T. Klein man. “Energy 
and World Fiance.” 


9-920, WEVD: Labor News Con- 
ference. .Guest, Irving Brown, 
international- representative of 
the AFL-CIO. 


it 












* 




AM HI - » 

WKCR 

WKT U 913' - 

WLIB 11» - 
WUR _ «7"" 
WMCA S70 jr... 
WNBC M0 •• , . 
WNCN 

WNEW 1130 1QL7 ; r : 
WNJR 1430 ’ "'5 

1340 


WNNJ 


WBNX 

1380- 


WNWS 

. mi; 

WCBS 

8» MM 

WNYC 

830 93,9 ■ 

WCTC 

ItfO 


WNYE 

WjS'JS 

WCTO 

9i3 

WNYS. 

1440 . v ; 

- w.v 5r 

WCWP 


68.1 

WNYU 

WDHA 


1K.f 

WOR 

710 - 

WEVD 

1330 

V7.9 

WPAT 

930. n.i 

WFAS 

1230 

WPIX 

101.V •• 

WFOU 

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WPU 

HJ, 

WFME 


WPOW 

1330 

WFUV 


90-7 

WQMR- 

„ 9U--1 

WGBB 

1240 

wqXR 

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WGUI 

1300 


WRFM 

105.1 ’ 

WGSM 

740 


WRNW 

107.1 ' : 

WHBI 


1019 

WRVR 

105.7. : 

WHLI 

1100 

WSOU 

89J 1 

WHLW 

llffl 


W5US 

102J 

WHN 

1050 


WTFM 

103ji 

WHPC 


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WVHC 

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1310 106J . 

WINS 

1010 


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6» 10«U » 

WIOK 


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WWDJ 

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THE NEW YORK TIMES , SAmRDiiE -AHGHST 7, 1575 


_ 4 V - 1 ■■ 

South Falls burg SummerCrowd 
Has Changed and SoHastheTown 


. Continued FramPage 21 

rarious astrological factors. 
Behind the counter is a pic- 
ture of the gum flanked by 
flickering candles and flour- 
ishes of yellow daffodils. 

Farther down the street 
is Eliot Lazar's kosher mar- 
ket, transplanted this year 
from Monticello. “This is it.” 
Sir. Lazar says of the safe, 
peaceful community so at- 
tractive to the Hasidim. 
'’This is their mecca." 

Other businesses include 
the Old Falls Fish Market, 
which serves vegetarian 
Wishes but no fish, and a 
handcrafted jewelry shop 
where Alan Finchley strings 
ahains of meditation beads 
';hat are cheaper than those 
•sold at the ashraxn. 

But not everyone has bene- 
fited. 

Dan and Fay Malkiel. for 
example, gaze blankly toward 
the door oF their empty shoe 
store and explain that events 
have not worked in their fa- 
vor. 

“The Hindu cult won’t 
wear leather shoes,” Mr. Mal- 
kiel says, “and the Hassidic 
groups want black shoes. 
They buy them in the city. 
It doesn’t do much for the 
white-shoe business.” 

The whole rhythm of com- 
mercial activity is undergo- 
ing basic change. Saturday 
was formerly the briskest 
sales period of the week. 
Now South Fallsburg and 
neighboring Woodburne are 
quiet during the Jewish Sab- 
bath. Some stores dose for 
the day. But at sundown 
many reopen. 

Some South Fallsburg 


stores have recently begun 
Saturday night openings but 
Woodburne, the hub of Ha- 
sidic weekend influx, has fol- 
lowed the practice for two 
years. The town movie thea- 
ter's first Saturday showing 
is listed for 10:15 PJVL and 
the final feature goes on af- 
ter midnight At 2 AJdU the 
streets in town are still 
clogged with people. The lo- 
cal franchise. Lucky Dip ice 
cream reflecting the spirit 
of adaptation, has gone ko- 
sher. 

Earlier Resentment Cited 

‘The Initial response to 
them was not good ” says 
Adele Kanowicz, ownes. of 
the Kanowicz Dairy store for 
40 years. "There was resent- 
ment and bitterness. Now 
there are hardly any critics 
left. They are friendly, people 
and good to do business 

with.” 

Her opinion is widely 
shared. The religious groups 
conduct their programs m 
relative isolation, do not in- 
trude on community affairs 
and keep largely to them- 
selves. 

The greatest friction is not 
in terms of relationships but 
the result of the impact of a 
shrinking tax base. 

Philip Salon, the town as- 
sessor, has seen applications 
for exemptions from religious 
and educational groups rise 
sharply in the last three 
years. From his file he re- 
cently pulled a stack of seven 
applications now under re- 
view. They included a Bap- 
tist camp, a 1 Jewish school 
and a group called the Asso- 


ciation of Russian Explorers. 

The roost sensitive appli- 
cation among them has been 
filed by the Transcenden- 
tal Meditation organization, 
which clams educational, not 
religious, status. Previous to 
tile purchase of the hotel by 
the group the privately 
owned faculty paid $65,000 
ip taxes. 

The Transcendental Medi- 
tation group says it would 
be willing to pay for the town 
services it receives in lieu of 
taxes, and met with the 
Town Board to discuss the 
matter, but has made no firm 
offer yet. 

Sam Rosenshein, Town Su- 
pervisor, says that unless the 
figure is ^acceptable” the 
town will take the issue to 


town will take the issue to 
court 

“We have no objection to 
these groups, in fact we wel- 
come them here, 1 ’ says Mr. 
Rosenshein. “But when they 
are not willing to bear their 
share of the load they 
shouldn't be permitted to be 
entirely exempt” 

A study by the Sullivan 
County planning board* last 
summer put the assessed 
value of tax-exempt property 
in the Town of Fallsburg at 
$5.2 milli on, of which SO' 


2 Soviet Astronauts Log Soldier Sentenced to Life 
A Month in Space Station In Sla ying on Arm y Base 

MOSCOW, Aug. 6 (Reuters) FORT LEE, Va., Aug. 6 (AP) 
— Two Soviet astronauts, Boris — An Array man who had ad- 
Volkov and Vital! zholobov, May 

logged one month m space g was f 0un( j guilty of felony 
today with no sign that they murder by his military judge 
were about to -leave the orbit- today. 

lag Salyut 5 space station and Pfc. Broadus B. Brown, IS 
Zf _ 0 . Tt r years old, of Camden, NJ., was 

retirm to earth. sentenced to life at bard labor. 

Many observers here behevc[ He had testified at his court- 
the astronauts are out to beat' mart ial that he could not recall 
the space endurance record of events before or after Pvt 
84 days, set by the third United william E. Bruner, 18, of Jones- 
States Skylab crew. The Soviet boro. Ark., was slain here with 
record of 63 days was set last a low-caliber weapon, 
year by the Soyuz 18 crew in Maj. John W. Hanft, the mili- 
Salyut 4. tary judge, also ordered that 

• It was also 15 years today the defendant be given a dis- 

that the Soviet Union’s first honorable discharge from the 

24-hour space flight was made service and that he forfeit all 
by Gherman S. Titov aboard his pay and allowances. A -plea 
Vostok 2. The anniversary for clemency is to be made by 
prompted reflections in the his attorneys. 

1 press here on the advances of 

the Soviet space program since HELP REFRESH A KID 
; then. GIVE FRESH AIR FUND 


land was a relatively small 
fraction, $200,000 for that 
owned by local religious 
groups ana $335,000 for non- 
local groups. According to 
Virginia Kelly in the planning 
office, the figures are con- 
sidered very conservative and 
are rapidly increasing. 


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clover. You're NOT standing on a hard, un-giving floor 
— you're floating on bouncy, heavenly-soft clouds. Your 
feet are NOT hot and tired and burning and aching. They 
are da ngling In a cool mountain stream. You have HAPPY 
FEET, the all-new, all-marvelous, water-filled, factory- 
sealed Innersoles, a unique invention that puis the joy 
back Into walking, standing, running, dancing ... gives 
Instant blessed relief to corns, callouses, fallen arches, 
"fiat feet” and other foot miseries. 

Holds Itself To Contoore of Every Wearer’s Own Feet! 

Here's how “miracle" HAPPY FEET works. Slim, 
uniquely designed, patented innersole seals a cush- 
ioning flow of water within a newly developed lamlnatBd 
paly-vinyl fabric. Slip one into your shoe . . . and pressure 
of your foot distributes cushioned support hydrostatically ] 
over the entire sole, actually molds it to your own indi- 
vidual contours. Totally unlike any Innersole in the I 
world In blissful comfort! With every Step, you can actu~ 
any feel your feet being gently massaged and soothed. 
Flow of the water is stabiteed by built in open-cell re- | 
larder that prevents the liquid from sloshing! Flexing j 
motion actually “forces” your foot to get the exercise ' 
It needs, aiding circulation, strengthening foot muscles, 1 
protecting the metatarsal areas from pain and shock, 
helping toes to grip, cushioning the ball and the 
supporting the arch! j 

Wear in all shoes* boots, Sneakers, slippers. Com- I 
plelely undetectable when being worn— even fine for . 
sandals, open loes-and-heeied ladles' shoes. Sanitary, I 
washable, switchabie from shoe to shoe. To give your I 
feet a treat, to make fired aching feet feel re-bom, order 
now at ONLY S3.99 a pair. Step on it! j 

(j*srl2khkl& a, | 

WAREHOUSE OUTLET I 

Come In Hours: 9-$ (Mon. thru Fri.) (212) 695-3W7 I 

Serving Satisfied Customers for over 25 Years $ 


WOMEN'S 

• Polite (fits tiros 
- 5 and 6) 

■Small (fits sires 
7 and 8} 

• Medium (fits tire 
Sand 10) 


MEN'S 

• Small (fits sires 
7 and 8) 

• Medium (fits size 8) 
■ Larga (fits sires 

10 aid 11) 

• X-Larse (fits sire 12 ) 


B 90-day uomrr-Mcx guarantee 

MPPY FEET for SO days Take s hike . . . jogi 
l... (Kay lennts . . . dance ... op Am 
lily business II your feet don’t lesl nice i 
.ins of aches, parv frisua, return tori 
refund of pofCNreo price! 5 


| BUY WITH CONFIDENCE— ORDER TODAY! U 

JAY NORRIS Warehouse Outlet. 208 W. 38$ SL. j 
DapL 3-550. New York. N.Y. 10018 I 

□ Please rush me one pair of HAPPY FEET 1 
. #R1410 at-pirreftaw price of 8199 plus 804 i 

shipping and handling. I 

* □Women's □ Men's 

Stew. Si»: 

□ SAVE! Order ANY TWO pair (Woman's or 1 
Men's) for purchase price of only $0.88 pics I 


□ Women's 
Steels):..! 


□ Men's 
Steels):. 


Enclosed Is O check or 0 money order for 
5 Sorry, no ClOlCl 1 *— ftLY. residents 


5 Sorry, 

add aales texj 
Please Print: 



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Big savings to every Delta city, including these 


New York 
to: 

Atlanta 


Houston 


Miami/Ft.Lauderdale 


Regular Day 
Tourist Fares, 
round trip . 

$1 


Day 

Freedom Fares, 
round trip ~ 


Regular Night. 
Coach Fares, 
round trip 


Night Coach 
Freedom Fares 
round trip 


164 


Orlando/Walt Disney World 

190 

152. ■, ] 

Tampa/St.Pete 

190 

152 ] 


Delta saves you up to 25% off *•* • 

Day Tourist Fares. Fly to your is: * 
favorite Florida resort with a Delta L A 
Freedom Fare. You get 25% off on jfl 
Night Coach round trips and 20% K 
off on daytime round trips. If |B 

you’re going to a city outside 
Florida, use a Delta Freedom Fare mm 
and get 15% off on your daytime W 
round trip. Naturally, at these f. 

bargain rates there are some re- ' ■ .• 
strictions. Call Delta or yourTVavel £*- 
Agent for details. You can also buy J > ' 
your ticket any time, fly any m'ght ' ' 
and save about 20% with Delta ■ 

one-way Night Coach Fares to . 
most cities. 

For full details. and instant * 

reservations thru Deltamatic? call *:■ '■& 
DeltainNewYorkat(212) 239-0700, 
in Nassau at ( 516) 292-1555, in New *,%■.; 
Jersey at 1 201) 622-2111. Or see your >: v:' 
friendly TVavel Agent. Ddta and ; 
your Travel Agent accept American ' v' 
Express and all other major 11 ? ' 

general-purpose credit cards. j 

Have a nice trip. MDELTA Hii 






;.v' "-r, •; 


Choose from dozens of thrifty 
Delta Dream Vacations? Florida 
' / Fly/Drive Vacation, $205 to 
S317 (for party of 1 to 4), 8 days, 

. \ * 7 nights, plus air fare. Great for 

. • I . couples, families, groups. Thke 
j- your pick-of hotels and motels just 

/ about anywhere in Florida. You get 
? room for party of 1 to 4 persons for 
• .? . 7 nights and a car with unlimited 

t; : ; mileage for 8 days (you buy gas, 

,.r j- . and. extra insurance coverage if 
_ I • desired). Take your pick of 5 types 
j - ; cars. (Size and car company 

§ 4 ; determine package price). Drop-off 

charge if not returned to original 
trip renting station. Eff.to Dec.15,1976. 

' ITDL-GOGAK3 ITDL-COGA23 

- {& Fares and tour rates subject to change 
without notice. 






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STATE ZIP 

■ — iwii w i a pjay Norris Coip^ 1B76 ■“* 


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